Search Results for "on a day this week"
Back to homepageIMRALI IS NOT THAT FAR – (VIDEO) 0
Imrali is not that far. And lots of people share Abdullah Ocalan’s fate. It has never been that evident as in the latest weeks. Shut up in a prison-island, Ocalan’s isolation is of his own, of the only man, detained
Read MoreIL TESTO DELL’ACCORDO DI HILLSBOROUGH – 5 FEBBRAIO 2010 0
Agreement at Hillsborough Castle ———————————————————————— The full text of the agreement announced today by the 26 County Taoiseach Brian Cowen, the British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, the First Minister Peter Robinson and the Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness.———————————————————————— AGREEMENT AT
Read MoreTRT 6 report 0
Since the day it had been announced, at the end of 2008, the launch of TRT6, a only-kurdish channel broadcasted by the Turkish state television TRT, had caused all sort of passionate reactions. But strange enough, few of them had
Read MoreFAQ – KURDISTAN AND KURDS
Who are the Kurds? The Kurds are a population belonging to the indo-european ethnolinguistic stock, and more specifically to the Iranian one. Their language, beacuse of historical reasons and geographic discontinuity, has developed in several branches, of which the
Read MoreERDOGAN MEETS DTP
For the Prime Minister Erdogan, “it’s been a very, very important meeting. We’re in the middle of a process. I believe this meeting has increased our hopes for the future.” For the co-secretary of DTP, Ahmet Turk, “it’s been
Read MoreMAKING PEACE/ GERRY ADAMS 0
TOWARDS A UNITED IRELAND –
The single most important issue facing the people of Ireland and Britain is the achievement of Irish unity and the construction of a new relationship between Ireland and Britain based on equality. Economic crises, however severe, will come and go. Governments will come and go, but for more centuries than any of us care to contemplate Britain’s involvement in Ireland has been the source of conflict; partition, discord and division; and
great hurt between the people of these islands.The peace process has delivered an end to conflict and that is to be welcomed and applauded. But the underlying cause of conflict persists – the British government’s claim of jurisdiction over a part of Ireland. It is this denial of the Irish people’s right to self-determination, freedom and independence that is the core outstanding issue that must be resolved. Sinn Féin is initiating a conversation this week in Westminster about achieving this. Sinn Féin believes that a national representative democracy in a sovereign reunited Ireland is desirable, viable and achievable in this generation through peaceful and democratic methods.