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News magazine in secular Turkey honors al Qaeda

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  • News magazine in secular Turkey honors al Qaeda

    News magazine in secular Turkey honors al Qaeda

    By Nicholas Birch
    THE WASHINGTON TIMES
    August 22, 2005

    ISTANBUL -- A new magazine titled Kaide -- Turkish for al Qaeda -- praises
    terror mastermind Osama bin Laden, glamorizes the July 7 bombings in London
    and vividly illustrates that extremism lurks in this secular nation where
    Islam is tightly regulated.

    Edited in Turkey's most cosmopolitan city, Istanbul, and available on
    newsstands everywhere, the magazine veers between the laughable and the
    horrible.

    Headlines such as "The Taliban have killed 600 GIs" jostle for space
    with proud revelations of yet another jihadist decapitation in Iraq.
    U.S.-led forces ousted the hard-line Taliban regime from Afghanistan in late
    2001.

    The main editorial sets "domination" as its goal and
    "Christian-Jewish-Western imperialism" as its main object of hate.

    With investigations continuing into a Turkish group that took
    responsibility for four suicide bombings in Istanbul in November 2003 that
    killed 62 persons, the magazine underscores the continuing appeal of
    militant Islam in a nation that seeks to join the European Union.

    "Our souls are tied with al Qaeda," Kaide editor Ali Osman Zor told the
    secular weekly Tempo at his magazine's office in Kasimpasa, a poor Istanbul
    district in which Turkey's prime minister grew up. "We are honored to have
    this tie."

    Asked to explain the magazine's cover headline -- "Al-Qaeda is
    liberating the world" -- he described recent bomb attacks on London and the
    Egyptian resort of Sharm el Sheik as "payback" for the "100,000 Iraqi
    civilians ... killed in the name of what [President] Bush calls 'liberating
    Iraq.'?"

    "I do not consider those killed in the London attacks as innocent," he
    said, "because [they] paid taxes to the English government ... which is
    responsible for the killing of thousands of Muslims."

    Barely two years ago, Mr. Zor and his editorial colleagues seemed likely
    to spend most of the rest of their lives in jail.

    A former spokesman for the Great East Islamic Raiders Front or IBDA-C --
    an extremist Salafist group set up in the late 1970s -- Mr. Zor was
    imprisoned in 1999 for "attempting to overthrow Turkey's secular state by
    force."

    The group's leader, Salih Izzet Erdis, is still in solitary confinement,
    but many of his followers were pardoned last year.

    It is a decision the government may have regretted when IBDA-C took
    responsibility later last year for the four Istanbul bombings -- a claim met
    with skepticism within the Turkish intelligence community.

    Like another newsletter the group publishes, Aylik, the main aim of
    Kaide appears to be to broaden support, but it is difficult to tell whether
    it will succeed.

    Support for Islamic extremism in Turkey always has been limited and
    appears to be diminishing. Seven percent of Turkish respondents to a Pew
    poll released last month expressed "some confidence" that bin Laden would
    "do the right thing regarding world affairs."

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