‘Traitors will not succeed,’ Turkish PM Erdoğan vows in Çanakkale

ÇANAKKALE/ANKARA
Hurriyet Daily News

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan used his speech commemorating the hundreds of thousands of Turks who died during the battle of the Gallipoli to declare: “Traitors will not succeed.”

ÇANAKKALE2014

“Turkey will surrender neither to outside forces nor to domestic traitors,” Erdoğan said.

Stressing the “unity of the country,” he said the martyrs resting in Çanakkale “battled for a united Turkey and would prefer a united generation instead of one divided on ethnic or religious differences.”

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu delivered strong messages on the occasion of March 18 Martyrs’ Day and the 99th Anniversary of the Battle of Gallipoli / Çanakkale Victory.

“Making a sacrifice is also needed from today in the name of the values that we live for. As the staff that flies the red flag in every part of the world, we are ready for every kind of sacrifice and we are ready for every kind of test, including dying when needed,” Davutoğlu said in a speech delivered a ceremony at the Foreign Affairs War Grave in the Cebeci Cemetery.

He also recalled that dozens of Turkish diplomats have been murdered in attacks by the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA).


Heroes of Çanakkale in photos

ANKARA – Anadolu Agency
Hurriyet Daily News
March 19, 2014

In celebration of the March 18 Martyrs’ Day and Dardanelles Naval Victory, the struggles of the fallen and war veterans can be seen in black and white photos set on display by the Turkish General Staff

Turkey has celebrated the 99th anniversary of March 18 Martyrs’ Day and Dardanelles Naval Victory.

The Turkish General Staff put on display the black and white images of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and his comrades during the War of Dardanelles 99 years ago, between April 25, 1915 and Jan. 9, 1916.

Nearly 1 million soldiers fought in the trench warfare of Gallipoli. The allies recorded 55,000 killed in fighting with 10,000 missing and 21,000 who died from disease. Turkish casualties were estimated at around 250,000. The campaign was the first major battle undertaken by Anzac forces and is often considered to be the mark of the birth of national consciousness in both Australia and New Zealand.

April 25 is celebrated every year, as Anzac Day and is the most significant commemorations of military casualties for these countries. Each year, thousands of people – many of them Australian and New Zealanders – travel to the battlefields in northwestern Turkey for Anzac Day to pay their respects to their ancestors who lost their lives on the battlefields of Gallipoli 99 years ago.

The battle is considered a defining moment for Turkish history as well. The struggle laid the grounds for the Turkish War of Independence and the foundation of the Republic of Turkey eight years later under Atatürk.

The photos show the soldiers with weapons in their hands, bags and nylons on their shoulders, while going to one of the most intense battlefields at the time. The journey of these soldiers, which includes the fallen and war veterans, can be seen in photos on display through the Turkish General Staff.