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Bülent Kokmaz’s Karabükspor played the entire second half with 10 men after Jamaica forward Luton Shelton got a direct red from referee Cüneyt Çakır in the 45th minute for a vicious foul on German-born libero Michael Fink. Nevertheless, the Karabük side won 2-1.
Samsunspor coach Mesut Bakkal blamed bad luck for the defeat. “At times things just do not go as planned, and that can explain why we could not outscore our opponents even when they were down to 10 men,” said the coach, whose team also failed to convert a penalty in the 84th.
Karabükspor and Samsunspor had several things in common going into Monday’s game. Both are Black Sea teams and so this match, naturally, was dubbed a Black Sea derby by the local media.
Before the match, Karabükspor was placed 16th with 21 points and Samsunspor 17th with 20, and both teams boasted the worst defensive record in the entire 18-strong Super League, having conceded a combined total of 88 goals.
The Karabükspor away match against İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyespor in week 24 was canceled due to inclement weather and rescheduled for Feb. 9. Samsunspor, however, was the talk of the town in week 24 after Bakkal’s men walloped visiting championship contender Fenerbahçe 3-1 at 19 Mayıs Stadium on Feb. 2.
Samsunspor, on paper, seemed more motivated for Monday’s match, but Karabükspor had the advantage of playing in front of its home fans -- the 12th player. One thing, however, was as certain as death: The winner would live to fight another day, while the loser would have to seriously start considering life in the Bank Asya League 1 (second division).
Kardemir Karabükspor took the game to Samsunspor after referee Çakır blew the starting whistle at 7 p.m., proving once again that football is a game played not on “a piece of paper” -- a notorious phrase in Turkey -- but on the field of play.
Striker İlhan Parlak, a Fenerbahçe reject, broke the deadlock after 15 minutes, when he hit a powerful shot into the back of the Samsunspor net to give Karabükspor a 1-0 lead.
Things were expected to turn sour for Karabükspor after the 45th minute, when Shelton got his marching orders and the team was reduced to 10 men. But that was far from being the case as Kardemir Karabükspor returned from the break even stronger than the first half. And so it came as no surprise when İlhan scored a brace in the 55th to double the score for Korkmaz’s team -- redirecting a pass from Galatasaray reject Mustafa Sarp past Samsunspor’s junior international keeper Mahmut Ertuğrul Taşkıran.
Midfielder Murat Yıldırım scored Samsunspor’s consolation goal four minutes before the end of regular time (86th) but it was too little, too late to turn the tide in favor of Baykal’s men.
Karabük’s Korkmaz, despite his team’s victory, was furious after Monday’s match, not because of the result but because of the tight schedule organized by the malfunctioning Turkish Football Federation (TFF). “Never in my life have I played six matches in two weeks,” said Korkmaz, whose team will be facing İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyespor away on Thursday and then take on Fenerbahçe at home on Sunday.
“We have applied for the Sunday match to be moved to Monday, but to no avail. Anyway, I have also said that as long as you put on a good fight you can never lose. And that’s what happened in the match against Samsunspor,” he added.
Elsewhere on Monday, Eskişehir spor won 3-1 over visiting İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyespor, and Manisaspor compounded the woes of doomed Ankaragücü with a 1-0 victory in the cold capital.
Three more skulls were found Monday during excavations in the southeastern province of Diyarbakır, bringing the total number of human skulls found in the province’s historic İçkale neighborhood over the past few weeks to 29.
By a team of 20 experts employed by the Diyarbakır Governor’s Office, the units found three more skulls in the area. A large number of bone fragments and skulls were inadvertently discovered in the past weeks by laborers laying pipes close to the former headquarters of JİTEM, a clandestine intelligence organization within the gendarmerie that is believed to have been responsible for thousands of unsolved murders in eastern and southeastern Turkey in the ‘90s.The intensive excavations in the area over the past few weeks have raised hopes that light will be shed on some of the unsolved murders that took place during this dark period. Hundreds of people are said to have been tortured at the JİTEM headquarters. Although İçkale was known to be one of JİTEM’s execution sites, no excavations in search of human remains were permitted in the area before the discovery because it had been designated an historic site. Bone fragments and skulls that were unearthed last month have been transported under high security to the Council of Forensic Medicine (ATK) in İstanbul, where DNA tests will be carried out.Three three skulls that the units found didn’t unearth it because of risk of damage to skull due to heavy snow.
MUNICH — Arab and Turkish officials slammed talk of a military strike against Iran, saying Sunday it would be a disaster for the region and calling for renewed negotiations, while also urging the international community to keep pressure on Syria to end the bloodshed there.
Paul Auster: 'There are nearly 100 writers imprisoned in Turkey'. Photograph: Xavier Bertral/EPA/Corbis
American novelist Paul Auster has hit back after the Turkish prime minister described him as "an ignorant man".
Auster, author of the acclaimed New York Trilogy, told Turkish paper Hurriyet earlier this week that he refused to visit Turkey because of imprisoned journalists and writers. "How many are jailed now? Over 100?" Auster, a popular author in Turkey where his new book Winter Journal has just made its first appearance, said. "Us Democrats got rid of the Bushes. We got rid of [former vice president Dick] Cheney who should have been put on trial for war crimes. What is going on in Turkey?"
Turkey's prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was quick to respond, saying on Wednesday, in what was described as a "mocking" tone: "As if we need you! Who cares if you come or not? Would Turkey lose any grandeur?"
Erdogan also criticised Auster, the grandson of Jewish immigrants, for visiting Israel. "Supposedly Israel is a democratic, secular country, a country where freedom of expression and individual rights and freedoms are limitless. What an ignorant man you are … Aren't these the ones that rained bombs down on Gaza? The ones that launched phosphorus bombs and used chemical weapons. How can you not see this?" said the Turkish prime minister. "This gentleman can't see the repression and rights violations in Israel … This is serious disrespect to Turkey."
The war of words continues with a statement issued by Auster, in which he says that "whatever the prime minister might think about the state of Israel, the fact is that free speech exists there and no writers or journalists are in jail".
"According to the latest numbers gathered by International PEN, there are nearly 100 writers imprisoned in Turkey, not to speak of independent publishers such as Ragip Zarakolu, whose case is being closely watched by PEN Centers around the world," said Auster.
Zarakolu was one of more than 40 free speech activists detained in Istanbul in November, prompting international protests. The founder of Belge Publishing House and a member of Turkish PEN, Zarakolu has released controversial books documenting the massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during the first world war. Seven Swedish MPs have now applied for him to be awarded the Nobel peace prize, a move supported by the International Publishers Association.
Syrians and Turks in Istanbul Protest Latest Syrian Show of Force
Dorian Jones
Last updated on: February 03, 2012 7:00 PM
In Istanbul, Turkey hundreds of Syrians and Turks protested against the latest reported crackdown by Syrian forces on dissent which killed more than 200 people. Syrian neighbor Turkey has become a base for the Syrian opposition.
"Assad the murderer," hundreds of protesters chanted against the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad outside Syria's consulate in Istanbul. The demonstration comes in response to what Syrian opposition groups claim was the killing of scores of people in the shelling of an opposition neighborhood in the city of Homs on Friday.
Homs is one of the main centers of opposition to the Syrian president. Damascus has denied its security forces attacked Homs. But such denials did little to quell the anger of protestors.
"He will burn the country to stay on the chair, So to secure their position they are pushing for this sectarian war actually," said one protester.
Along with condemning President Assad there was also strong condemnation of Russia.
Addressing the protestors, one of the demonstrator organizers accused Moscow of also being responsible for the ongoing bloodshed. Moscow has continued to supply arms to Damascus and has opposed international efforts in the U.N. Security Council to take a tough stance against the ongoing crackdown by Syrian security forces.
The Turkish foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, speaking in response to the Homs attack, called on the United Nations to take a clear and precise position on the subject of civilian losses.
Ankara has broken with its once close ally Damascus over the ongoing crackdown on dissent and is now strongly backing the Syrian opposition.