Posted on 03/29/2017 2:57:05 PM PDT by Texas Fossil
A high-ranking official from Turkeys second-largest state-owned bank was arrested in New York City March 27.
On the orders of the acting US attorney for the Southern District of New York, Joon H. Kim, FBI agents arrested Mehmet Hakan Atilla, Halkbanks vice president for international banking, for violating the US-led sanctions against Iran. The press release from Kims office accused Atilla with participating in a years-long scheme to violate American sanctions laws by helping Reza Zarrab, a major gold trader, use U.S. financial institutions to engage in prohibited financial transactions that illegally funneled millions of dollars to Iran.
Zarrab, a Turkish citizen of Azeri Iranian background who himself is currently in US custody, entered the spotlight in December 2013, when he was arrested for bribing high-ranking Cabinet ministers from Turkeys ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). The scandal erupted with the arrest of several AKP ministers sons by police officers and prosecutors suspected to be linked to US-based Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen. Meanwhile, compromising phone conversations involving various AKP personalities, including then-AKP Chairman and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, appeared online. The corruption and eavesdropping scandal led to a fallout between Gulen and Erdogan, who had enjoyed an alliance against Turkeys secular old guard from 2002 until 2013.
Prior to reaching notoriety, Zarrab allegedly acted as the go-between for Turkey and Iran when Washington maintained a nearly watertight sanctions regime against Tehran over its nuclear program. (It is worth noting that an Al-Monitor story translated from the Turkish daily Milliyet in September 2012 some 15 months before Zarrabs arrest in Turkey identifies him as a leading name in the gold-for-oil scheme.)
The sanctions regime, which intensified from 2010 to 2016, involved such technical matters as denying Iranian banks access to SWIFT, the worlds leading international financial transfer system, and barring Iranian oil tankers from purchasing insurance policies. In this context, Ankara bought oil and natural gas from Tehran in exchange for gold bullion, which is much harder to trace than electronic money transfers. As Al-Monitors Fehim Tastekin reported in December 2013, Halkbank played a key role in the so-called gold-for-gas trade between Turkey and Iran.
Atillas arrest is likely to trouble the already problematic ties between the United States and Turkey. On March 19, 2016, US officials arrested Zarrab in Miami for violating the Iran sanctions. Because of Zarrabs connections to the AKP, Turkish officials lashed out against the United States, describing his arrest as sick behavior and strategic animosity against Erdogan and Turkey. Some media outlets even claimed that Preet Bharara, the US attorney for the Southern District of New York who had overseen Zarrabs arrest, was connected to the Gulenist network that many Turks refer to as the Fethullah Gulen Terror Organization, or FETO. The problem got so serious that according to Hurriyets Washington correspondent Tolga Tanis, Erdogan put serious pressure on US Vice President Joe Biden to have Zarrab released when they met in New York in September 2016.
Although they have remained quiet so far, Erdogan and the AKP will likely interpret Atillas arrest in the same vein as Zarrabs situation and accuse Washington of engaging in hostile behavior against Turkey. US-Turkey relations are bound to get more complicated on the eve of US Secretary of State Rex Tillersons visit to Turkey set for March 30.
I couldn't find the video of the turkey getting shocked, but here's his stand-in.
good catch
Which is weird since turkeys are native to the Americas, but Europeans named them after the traders from Turkey from which they indirectly obtained the bird. Meanwhile, in Turkey, the turkeys are called hindis, which means ‘Hindus’ or in other words, ‘Indians’ because at the time people of the old world commonly thought the Americas were the far side of India, and not separate. The French then called them coq d’Inde [rooster of India] which got shortened to just dinde. The Portuguese at least placed them as being from the western hemisphere if not specifically from North America and where both species of turkey originate and called them peru... closer but no cigar. The Malaysians, who acquired them from the Dutch, called them Dutch chickens. Aztecs called them huexolotl, which the Spaniards pronounced guajolote, used today.
The legend of the poor turkey girl:
https://www.firstpeople.us/FP-Html-Legends/ThePoorTurkeyGirl-Zuni.html
American Indian legends do not connect toward the reality of Turkey.
“piasa” (Thunderbird) https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piasa
I see why this interests you. I’ve read nothing about this before. Thank you for the explanation of Indian tradition.
Found the Wiki article interesting because my father-in-law’s grandfather was named Tuck (mentioned in the wiki) and his grandmother was full blooded Comanche Indian. (They were from Quanah, TX)
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