Blogs about Europe

Quiz on Europe in Turkey

Quiz on Europe in Turkey
There has been a recent project with the title “Quiz on Europe in Turkish high schools”.
Quiz on Europe in Turkish high schools
The 2008 edition of the quiz on Europe, recently launched in Turkey, is going to be a success. The quiz involved more than 400 high schools.

The 2008 edition of the quiz on Europe, recently launched in Turkey, is going to be a success.

The quiz involved more than 400 high schools in Beyoglu (26), Umraniye (25), Pendik (23), Bahcelievler (23) and Kadikoy (22).

The students’ competition, which will last for two months, has the purpose to stimulate study and research on the issues which concern the European Union.

The finals will be held in Ankara in May.

“After the success of the 2007 edition, we have extended the contest to 15 cities, reaching also Van, with the support of the Education Ministry and the Info Network of the EU”, the director of the European information centre Aybige Tanriover said.

The schools of Istanbul started the preparation stage of the quiz at the beginning of March.

The European quiz is organised by the Education Ministry, delegation of the EU in Turkey, and the European information centres spread throughout the country including Adana, Antalya, Bursa, Denizli, Diyarbakir, Edirne, Gaziantep, Izmir, Kayseri, Mersin, Samsun and Van.

The winning class will go on a trip to Brussels and Berlin in June 2008.

AA

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Turkey: Nabucco Project

Turkey: Nabucco Project

The Nabucco pipeline project makes Turkey an energy terminal and connects Europe to large natural gas reserves of the Caspian, Middle East and Egypt.

The pipeline will be 3,300 kilometers long and cost around five billion euros to complete.

It would be completed by the year 2012. Once it is completed, the pipeline will carry 31 billion cubic meters of gas annually.

Nabucco Project Details

The Nabucco pipeline, or Nabucco Project is a planned natural gas pipeline that will transport natural gas from Turkey to Austria, via Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary. It will run from Erzurum in Turkey to Baumgarten an der March, a major natural gas hub in Austria. Some consider the pipeline as a diversion from the current methods of importing natural gas solely from Russia.

Nabucco could bring gas supplies from Iran, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Egypt and Syria. It will be connected near Erzurum with the Tabriz-Erzurum pipeline, and with the South Caucasus Pipeline, connecting Nabucco Pipeline with the planned Trans-Caspian Gas Pipeline. It will run from Erzurum in Turkey to Baumgarten an der March in Austria with total length of 3,300 kilometres (2,050 mi).In early years after completion the deliveries are expected to be between 4.5 and 13 billion cubic meters (bcm) per annum, of which 2 to 8 bcm goes to Baumgarten. Later, approximately half of the capacity is expected to be delivered to Baumgarten and half of the natural gas is to serve the markets en-route. The transmission volume of around 2020 is expected to reach 25.5 to 31 bcm per annum, of which up to 16 bcm goes to Baumgarten.

Construction of pipeline is expected to begin in 2009 and is planned to be finished in 2012. It estimated to cost around 4.6 billion EUR (5.8 billion USD). The company leading the project is OMV from Austria.

The Nabucco project is included in the EU Trans-European Energy Network programme and a feasibility study for the Nabucco pipeline has been performed under an EU project grant. The European Commission Nabucco coordinator is Jozias van Aartsen.

More Details on Nabucco Project
The project is developed by the Nabucco Gas Pipeline International GmbH, established in 2004 in Vienna. The shareholders of the company are:

* OMV (Austria)
* MOL (Hungary)
* Transgaz (Romania)
* Bulgargaz (Bulgaria)
* BOTAŞ (Turkey)
* RWE (Germany)

All current shareholders have 16.67% of the shares.

French company Gaz de France was also interested to get a stakes in the pipeline, but was rejected by Turkey.

In future the consortium could include also the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic. Also Kazakhstan has indicated its readiness to join the project.

Alternative to Nabucco Project

Gazprom has proposed an alternative project competing Nabucco Pipeline by constructing a second section of the Blue Stream pipeline beneath the Black Sea to Turkey, and extending this up through Bulgaria, Serbia and Croatia to western Hungary.

News About Nabucco Project

‘Turkey will complete Nabucco’

Turkey will complete Nabucco Project successfully, says Turkish Energy Minister Guler.

Turkish Energy & Natural Resources Minister Hilmi Guler said Thursday he believed Turkey would complete Nabucco Project successfully as it did with important projects such as BTC (Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline project) and Shah Sea.

Guler met Jozias Van Aartsen, European Union’s coordinator for natural gas projects in southern Europe, in his office in Ankara.

Guler told reporters Aartsen and he focused on Nabucco Project in their meeting.

“The project is being conducted rapidly. Turkey attaches great importance to this project,” he said.

On the other hand, Aartsen said he would have a meeting with PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan this evening.

Nabucco project is progressing well and Turkey has a great contribution to it, Aartsen said.

Sources for Nabucco Project:

  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nabucco_Pipeline
  • http://www.newstime7.com

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‘Bogus universities’ in the UK

‘Bogus universities’ in the UK

BBC London has exposed an international education scam targeting foreign students in the United Kingdom. Students who come to the UK to get a British degree might be duped.

The multi-million pound con has gone on virtually unchecked for seven years. It exploits lax UK Government policy and uses the UK’s most prestigious universities as a front to sell unrecognised and worthless degrees.

Every year 40,000 foreign students come to London to study for a British degree. While many attend famous institutions with worldwide reputations, others are tempted into cheaper backstreet colleges by conmen where they end up paying thousands in fees. But the degrees they get are as dodgy as the professors who hand them out.

BBC’s investigation began with student Sounak Halder who was granted a visa to study for a UK degree at an East London college. In 2006 after seeing an advert for a UK recognised masters degree, Sounak from Kolkata took out a £5,000 loan to come to London to study. He made sure that the college was listed on a British Government website.

He says: “I was happy at that point of time. After that I’d gone to the British Council to check for the check, they also said yes, just check the DFES site. If the college’s name is there it means it’s fine … go for that.”

The college Sounak had chosen was linked to the Irish International University (IIU). It would be the one to award him the Masters degree. But concerns had already been raised in London over the IIU and others.

In fact BBC London discovered that the IIU was already listed on a secret Government blacklist of suspect universities back in 2005.

BBC  set up an undercover investigation with their bogus academic, Professor Beeg. Pretending to want to set up his own college in London, he met two men who run Irish International University, Professor Sandhu and Dr Varo.

Within two hours of meeting him, Dr Varo offered BBC’s Professor Beeg a professorship. He said: “You must become attached to a university so we can put you under Irish International University and give you a professorship.”

Varo stated that Irish International was bona fide. He said: “It is not bogus you know, or no existence or anything like that, that’s not true.”

But when BBC London went to the IIU address in Dublin, there was absolutely nothing there. No staff, no faculty, no students, nobody had even heard of a university on the premises.

The Irish International University’s degrees are backed by the Quality Assurance Commission UK (QAC UK) which Professor Sandhu points out is “an independent body that basically maintains the quality whether it’s in Africa or the UK … It’s a private body.”

But when BBC London arrived at the QAC’s office in North London, they found it was a virtual office, just like Dublin.

Students are not the only people being duped. Leading businesswoman Mary Chapman, CEO of the Chartered Management Institute, attended Irish International’s degree ceremony at Oxford University’s Divinity School as a guest of honour.

Irish International’s scam depends on its ability to hire out facilities in Oxford and Cambridge. This lends the outfit credibility, not to mention numerous photo opportunities which it uses to publicise itself to students around the world.

BBC tracked down the Honorary Chancellor of the Irish International University, his Excellency Baron Knowth. It turns out he is no aristocrat; he is in fact Jeffrey Wooller, a chartered accountant from London

He has been a prominent member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants. He owns a £1.2million townhouse in Kensington as well as a flat in Monte Carlo, where he is a tax exile.

The UK government promises that by 2009 all colleges will have to be accredited if they want to bring overseas students to the UK to learn. It is progress, but not enough to have saved the students who have been conned out of thousands of pounds for dodgy degrees.

BBC

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Kosovo: Europe’s 49th state

Kosovo: Europe’s 49th state

Kosovo became the 49th state in Europe after MPs proclaimed independence on Sunday, (17th February 2008). The following is the news regarding Kosovo’s independence from AP news agency.
Kosovo MPs proclaim independence
Kosovo’s parliament declared the territory on Sunday, mounting a historic bid to become an “independent and democratic state” backed by the US and European allies.

The declaration, read by Prime Minister Hashim Thaci, said Kosovo would be a democratic country that respected the rights of all ethnic communities.

The US and a number of EU countries are expected to recognise Kosovo on Monday.

Serbia’s PM denounced the US for helping create a “false state”. Serbia’s ally, Russia, called for an urgent UN Security Council meeting.

Tens of thousands of people had thronged the streets of Kosovo’s capital, Pristina, since the morning.

When news came of the declaration in parliament, the centre of the city erupted with fireworks, firecrackers and celebratory gunfire.

Red balloons decorated with the black Albanian eagle drifted across the sky.

Hundreds of Kosovo Albanians staged noisy celebrations in Brussels, outside the headquarters of Nato and the European Union.

Kosovo’s Prime Minister Hashim Thaci waves during a press conference in Kosovo’s capital Pristina, Sunday, Feb. 17, 2008

In Belgrade, extra police took to the streets on a heightened state of alert for violent demonstrations. Several Serbian ministers travelled to Kosovo to show their support for the ethnic Serbian minority.

Kosovo’s 10 Serbian MPs boycotted the assembly session in protest at the declaration.

Correspondents say the potential for trouble between Kosovo’s Serbs and ethnic Albanians is enormous.

Serbia’s Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica blamed the US which he said was “ready to violate the international order for its own military interests”.

“Today, this policy of force thinks that it has triumphed by establishing a false state,” Mr Kostunica said.

“Kosovo is Serbia,” Mr Kostunica said, repeating a well-known nationalist Serb saying.

Kosovo expatriates with Albanian and U.S. flags celebrate the Independence of Kosovo from Serbia in front of the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, Sunday, Feb. 17, 2008

The declaration was approved with a show of hands. No-one opposed it.

“We have waited for this day for a very long time,” Mr Thaci told parliament before reading the text, paying tribute to those who had died on the road to independence.

From today, he said, Kosovo was “proud, independent and free”.

“The independence of Kosovo marks the end of the dissolution of the former Yugoslavia,” the prime minister said - Kosovo was a unique case that should not set a precedent.

He said it would be built in accordance with the UN plan drawn by former Finnish President, Martti Ahtisaari - at the end of negotiations which did not produce a deal.

The international military and civilian presence - also envisaged by the Ahtisaari plan - was welcome, he added.

There should be no fear of discrimination in new Kosovo, he said, vowing to eradicate any such practices - and conveying a similar message in Serbian. President Fatmir Sejdiu had a similar pledge - also addressed in Serbian.

The declaration was then signed by all the MPs present.

Kosovo’s top leaders are due to go to a sports hall later where the Kosovo Philharmonic Orchestra is expected to play Beethoven’s Ode to Joy.

They are also due to sign their names on giant iron letters spelling out the word “newborn” which was to be displayed in Pristina.

Kosovar Albanians dancing and play music as they celebrate Kosovo’s declaration of independence, in Pristina, Sunday

More fireworks and street celebrations will follow.

Some ethnic Albanians, who make up the majority of Kosovo’s population, earlier laid flowers on the graves of family members killed by Serbian security forces during years of conflict and division.

Limitations

The declaration approved by Kosovo’s parliament contains limitations on Kosovan independence as outlined in Mr Ahtisaari’s plan.

Kosovo, or part of it, cannot join any other country. It will be supervised by an international presence. Its armed forces will be limited and it will make strong provisions for Serb minority protection.

Recognition by a number of EU states, including the UK and other major countries, will come on Monday after a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels, says the BBC’s Paul Reynolds.

The US is also expected to announce its recognition on Monday.

Three EU states - Greek Cyprus, Romania and Slovakia - have told other EU governments that they will not recognise Kosovo,

Russia’s foreign ministry has indicated that Western recognition of an independent Kosovo could have implications for the Georgian breakaway provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

Source: http://www.newstime7.com

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