Turkish Daily News, 96-05-10
From: Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs <http://www.mfa.gov.tr>
TURKISH DAILY NEWS 10 May 1996
CONTENTS
[01] Parliament passes second Ciller probe
[02] Ankara looks for alternatives to Baku-Supsa pipeline
[03] Turkey drafts law to regulate private power production
[04] President Demirel says straits cannot be used for increased
transportation of Caspian oil
[05] Demirel calls on Turkish businessmen to put trust in Uzbekistan's
future
[06] Denktas calls on Clerides for face-to-face meeting
[01] Parliament passes second Ciller probe
Looming: A third probe into Ciller, this time into her
personal assets, is in the offing and will be debated within the
next two weeks
TDN Parliament Bureau
ANKARA- Parliament on Thursday backed a second motion introduced
by the main opposition Welfare Party (RP) for an investigation
of True Path Party (DYP) Chairwoman Tansu Ciller's alleged corruption
in the sale of automotive concern TOFAS.
Ciller has been accused of irregularities in the bidding process
regarding the selection of which firms which would market the
state shares in TOFAS. The passage of a parliamentary motion late
April regarding the an inquiry into Ciller concerning the alleged
corruptions at state electricity distributor TEDAS led to a crisis
of confidence between the coalition partners. The motion, which
was also introduced by the pro-Islamic RP, was passed by 232 votes
to 179 in the 550-seat Parliament in a secret vote, during which
32 deputies from Mesut Yilmaz's Motherland Party (ANAP) apparently
voted in favor of the investigation, as thus against their coalition
partner, the DYP.
The two center-right parties formed a coalition after the Dec.
24 election left no outright winner. A third motion requesting
an investigation of Ciller's assets will be debated in Parliament
within the next two weeks. Only the DYP deputies voted against
the RP motion during Thursday's session. Besides ANAP, the parliamentary
opposition parties, namely the Republican People's Party (CHP)
and the Democratic Left Party (DSP) backed the RP motion.
RP parliamentary group Deputy Chairman Sevket Kazan, who wanted
the motion to be accepted by his colleagues, said that there were
grave doubts over the TOFAS tender and added that the existing
documents demanded the opening of an inquiry. Many from the DYP
women's branch followed the debate from the viewing galleries
in Parliament. Deputy Parliament Speaker Uluc Gurkan warned the
spectators not to disrupt the proceedings. Ciller followed the
debates from her office in Parliament.
ANAP, the RP and the DYP will each be represented by four seats
on the 15-person commission; the DSP has two and the CHP one.
The Parliament will decide on whether or not to recommend charges
to the court after the commission of inquiry, which will convene
over a four-month period, studies the allegations and presents
its report. The Ciller opponents, however, have to muster 276
votes in the Parliament to send Ciller before the Supreme Court.
During the debate, Ciller was represented by Ahmet Iyimaya from
the DYP group. Iyimaya said that Ciller had acted in conformity
with the law and that was innocent of any responsibility. He said
bureaucrats had been cleared of charges in an earlier case on
the subject. He claimed that the motion was politically motivated
and had no legal foundation.
The ANAP administration branded Ciller's harsh criticism of her
coalition partner for its support for the RP motions as unjust.
ANAP parliamentary group Deputy Chairman Cumhur Ersumer rejected
all the charges which Ciller levelled on Wednesday against his
party at a press conference in Parliament. Ersumer said his party
faced accusations which it had never deserved.
Ersumer said that he and his colleagues did not have the intention
of stabbing Ciller in the back, as she has claimed. Yilmaz, who
has not met with Ciller since the crisis of confidence emerged
on April 24, talked with her over the phone last week and told
her that the ANAP parliamentary group would continue to cast its
votes as it wished during the votes on the parliamentary investigations.
As a result of the ongoing criticism by Ciller to discredit the
government, Yilmaz demonstrated that he did not intend to make
sacrifices for the continuation of the government.
(TDN, 10.05.1996, page 1)
[02] Ankara looks for alternatives to Baku-Supsa pipeline
Foreign Minister Emre Gonensay to travel to Washington to ask
for the reinstatement of US support for Baku-Ceyhan route
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Turkey, unable to persuade the international oil
consortium on Turkish terms for financing the Baku-Supsa pipeline,
explicitly declared Thursday that it would look for alternative
ways for transporting Caspian oil via Turkey.
"We have not abandoned the Baku-Supsa pipeline," Foreign
Ministry deputy spokesman Nurettin Nurkan said in his weekly press
conference on Thursday. "But if there is any delay or reluctance
on the realization of the Baku-Supsa route -- which we consider
as an essential component of the Baku-Ceyhan line -- Turkey will
use its own initiative to look at other alternatives." He
said that a possible alternative was having talks with Georgia
and Azerbaijan for the transit rights of Azeri oil.
Since 1991, Turkey has aimed to ensure the passage of oil pipelines
that would carry the lucrative Caspian oil to European markets
via its own territory. When the project for Azeri early oil came
up, Turkey shifted the balances from the Russian route -- that
would take the oil to the Russian Black Sea port of Novorossiysk
-- by saying that it would finance the Baku-Supsa route and buy
the early oil. From then on, Ankara would carry the route further,
down to Turkey's Mediterranean port of Ceyhan.
In order to ensure that the Baku-Supsa route will be a step toward
the longer Baku-Ceyhan one, Ankara insisted on certain conditions
on the financing agreement, ranging from a Turkish-dominated consortium
to build the pipeline to explicit wording that the ultimate aim
was a Baku-Ceyhan pipeline. Ankara also said that there should
be an upper limit to the transportation capacity of the pipeline.
But the International Consortium for Azeri Oil (AIOC) failed to
accept those conditions so far, and announced that it had opted
instead for inviting fresh bids for the project.
Almost simultaneously with the delay in the Baku-Supsa agreement,
Russia and Kazakhstan signed an agreement for the construction
of an oil pipeline that would take the oil from the Tenghiz fields
to Novorossiysk.
In a direct response to the developments, Foreign Minister Emre
Gonensay said earlier this week that Turkey was looking for new
alternatives to the Baku-Supsa pipeline, and was quoted as saying
that the project had been abandoned.
A day later, the semi-official Anatolia news agency reported that
the Turkish credit offer made to the AIOC had been withdrawn.
This had been conveyed to AIOC President Terry Adams in a letter,
Anatolia said.
Spokesman Nurkan sought to bring clarification to Foreign Minister
Emre Gonensay's statement in his weekly press conference, saying
that Turkey had not given up the Baku-Supsa pipeline.
"We continue to consider it as an important step to the realization
of the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline," Nurkan said.
If Baku-Supsa is not possible
Nurkan stressed that Turkey would bring no new offers to the consortium,
but use its own initiative to talk to Georgia and Azerbaijan on
transit rights. This may mean that Turkey, through its own financing,
may seek a new route that would bring Azeri oil to Tbilisi and
transport it to Ceyhan via a pipeline from there. However, it
seems difficult to assess the feasibility of such a project, particularly
if it is to be carried out independently of -- if not in spite
of -- the international consortium which has been established
for the transportation of the Caspian oil. Foreign Minister Emre
Gonensay will make a swift working visit to Washington on May
19, to discuss, along with Turco-Greek relations and Operation
Provide Comfort, the oil pipeline issue and ask for Washington's
support on the transportation of oil via Turkey.
Ankara has also started issuing strong messages on the safety
of the Bosphorus. "It is very clear that the safety of the
straits and Istanbul cannot be jeopardized," spokesman Nurkan
said, adding Turkey was ready to make adjustments regarding the
safety of its territorial waters.
Nurkan's remarks indicate a pending assessment in the Turkish
Foreign Ministry of further measures Turkey can use against the
large oil tankers which pass through the Bosphorus. "We have
no intention of revising the Montreux Convention," Nurkan
assured.
(TDN, 10.05.1996, page 1)
[03] Turkey drafts law to regulate private power production
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- The coalition government is reportedly drafting
a fresh piece of legislation in order to regulate power production
by private sector companies both for their own use and to trade.
Energy sources said the draft, detailing the principles of auto-production,
will encourage private firms to generate power.
"A new 'build-operate' system will thrive to ensure maximum
participation of private firms, including auto-production, into
the energy sector," the Anatolia news agency quoted one official
as saying.
The draft, prepared by the Energy Ministry, has been sent to ministers'
desks. It may win Cabinet approval within a week. The draft excludes
nuclear, hydroelectric and geothermal power stations from the
scope of the proposed build-operate model. It includes thermal,
liquefied natural gas, liquefied petroleum gas, natural gas and
imported coal-fired stations.
The Energy Ministry will be authorized to set electricity rates
if a private producer wishes to supply power to the public. The
ministry will also be allowed to give purchase guarantees to private
producers through the national power company TEAS.
Some 64 percent of Turkey's total power generation of 85 billion
kilowatt hours in 1995 was used in the industrial sector.
(TDN, 10.05.1996, page 2)
[04] President Demirel says straits cannot be used for increased
transportation of Caspian oil
President indicates pile up at entrance of straits as disincentive
for countries wanting to transport increased amounts of oil through
these waterways
By Yusuf Kanli
Turkish Daily News
SAMARKAND- President Suleyman Demirel, in Uzbekistan for
an official visit, said on Wednesday that the Turkish straits
could not be used to transport excessive amounts of Caspian crude
oil to international markets.
"The party that tries to increase the load on the straits
excessively will find its tankers stacking up at the entrance
of these straits," Demirel said.
Turkey has been wary of an agreement between Russia and Kazakhstan
that threatens to dangerously increase the oil tanker traffic
in the Turkish straits.
Turkey is not telling any country that it cannot use the straits,
Demirel said. But he added that the volume of traffic that these
waterways could handle was ultimately limited.
"Now we are talking about transporting early oil. That is
5 million-10 million tons of oil per year. This is no problem.
But what will happen when the need arises for transporting 100
or more million tons of oil per year?" Demirel said while
talking to reporters in the ancient city of Samarkand.
Demirel added that a pipeline running between Baku in Azerbaijan
and Ceyhan on Turkey's Mediterranean coast was "a must"
and said he believed everyone would come around to realizing this
eventually.
Demirel's remarks followed the remarks of Turkish Foreign Minister
Emre Gonensay earlier in the week in which he suggested Turkey
could institute further safety measures in the straits if Russia
planned to increase the tanker traffic there for Caspian oil.
Russia considers the new safety measures introduced in July 1994
and these latest remarks of Gonensay's as a ploy by Ankara aimed
at forcing the issue of a pipeline going over Eastern Anatolia.
Ankara does not deny the advantages such a pipeline will bring
Turkey but also says it is sincere when it expresses concern for
safety in the straits.
This concern is especially acute for the Bosphorus which has witnessed
major tanker accidents in recent years and on whose two shores
hundreds of thousands of Istanbul residents live.
(TDN, 10.05.1996, page 3)
[05] Demirel calls on Turkish businessmen to put trust in Uzbekistan's
future
President says Turkish investors could play an important role
in that country's economic development
Turkish Daily News
TASHKENT- President Suleyman Demirel on Thursday called
on Turkish businessmen to "continue trusting in the future
of Uzbekistan" and to invest in that country.
Demirel was speaking to a group of Turkish investors in the capital
of Uzbekistan just prior to ending his official visit to that
country.
Demirel said that Turkey and Uzbekistan were brotherly countries.
He indicated that the country that had been the most pleased when
Uzbekistan gained its independence was Turkey. "This is because
Turkey itself won a war of liberation and is naturally pleased
to see this as an example to other countries," he said.
Indicating that institutionalization in accordance with current
needs was one of the major problems facing countries like Uzbekistan
today, Demirel said Turkish businessmen could contribute to the
development of these countries.
"We have no other aim but to serve Uzbekistan. Others may
have ideas of coming here and securing great benefits for themselves.
But such an idea does not exist in the minds of our businessmen,"
Demirel said.
He indicated the fact that an estimated 200 Turkish companies
were now engaged in serious operations in that country was a matter
that had to be deeply appreciated. "We know the difficulties
involved in a country that is just opening up to a market economy.
But what is important here is good intentions ... Two of Turkey's
greatest assets are democracy and entrepreneurs who are aware
of modern technology. May God make your endeavors easier,"
Demirel said.
Addressing a press conference on Wednesday on his talks with the
president of Uzbekistan, Islam Kerimov, and his contacts during
his official visit to that country, Demirel said the development
of Eurasia was an opportunity for mankind that should not be missed.
He pointed out that 200 years of Russian and Soviet administration
in the region had had a significant destructive effect.
Demirel said that the Soviet Union had dissolved but that there
were still different peoples within the borders of the Russian
federation.
He pointed to the restive Chechens in this regard and said Russia
had tried to crush this nation in order to set an example to others
who may be thinking of independence from the federation.
"It is not right (for Russia) to say, 'This is Russia's internal
affair. I can shed blood as I please.' There are international
relations," Demirel said.
He went on to say that certain republics had been forced into
the Soviet Union even though they had nothing in common with Russia
in terms of their ethnicity, culture or religion.
He said that now that these countries had gained their independence
and were trying to stand on their own feet they were disturbed
at certain efforts aimed at trying to revive the Soviet Union.
"Politically speaking Eurasia has just joined the world geography,"
Demirel said, adding that developments in Tajikistan, Afghanistan
and Eurasia concerned Turkey very closely.
He pointed out that of the 3,200 foreign companies from 65 countries
in Uzbekistan 200 were Turkish. He said that the value of Turkey's
business undertakings abroad today stood at $10 billion and said
this figure could easily be increased to $50 billion.
(TDN, 10.05.1996, page 3)
[06] Denktas calls on Clerides for face-to-face meeting
By Ugur Akinci
Turkish Daily News
WASHINGTON -- Rauf Denktas, president of the Turkish Republic
of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), repeated his call for a face-to-face
meeting with Glafkos Clerides, president of Greek Cyprus, in order
to resolve the Cyprus issue. According to the TRNC office in New
York, Denktas said: "We can resolve this matter on a reciprocal
basis, by respecting each other's equality, sovereignty, rights
and status; by respecting bi-zonality; and by considering the
Treaties of Guarantee and Alliance, which saved Cyprus from being
colonized [by Greece], as fundamental. There is no other way."
Clerides recently said that Turkey had to "change its mentality"
to clear the way for a solution. Responding to Clerides' remark,
Denktas recalled that it was not Turkey which had created the
Cyprus problem. He advised Clerides to read his own memoirs. A
spokesman for the TRNC's New York office said that Clerides in
his book "Cyprus: My Deposition" had admitted that the
Greek preoccupation, from the beginning, had been that "Cyprus
should be a Greek Cypriot state," whereas the Turkish Cypriot
preoccupation "was to defeat any such effort and to maintain
the partnership concept."
Pointing out that the threat posed by Greece to Cyprus would continue
as long as the former's claim over the island continued, Denktas
said the most obvious evidence of this was "the militarization
in the south, the military agreement signed with Greece, and the
Greek Cypriot side's effort to dominate the island through the
European Union (EU)."
(TDN, 10.05.1996, page 4)
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