Turkey’s Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan has ignited a fresh storm in northern Cyprus after describing some Turkish Cypriot critics as “more hostile to Turks than an ordinary Greek Cypriot,” language that many on the island see as an open attempt to delegitimize the pro‑reunification camp and to frame domestic dissent as a security threat. In a recent interview on the pro‑government broadcaster A Haber, Fidan claimed that within the Turkish Cypriot community there are people who, although they “call themselves Turks,” are “far beyond a standard Greek in their hostility toward Turks.” He said he had been aware of such groups “since [his] time as head of the National Intelligence Organization (MİT),” describing them as “marginal” circles operating within certain “interest networks.” While reaffirming Ankara’s line that only a two‑state arrangement based on the “independence” of the internationally unrecognized Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) can work, Fidan added: “Either you exi...
Nearly 1,000 news reports and social media posts about the suspicious death of 21-year-old student Rojin Kabaiş have been blocked in Turkey at the request of Van Yüzüncü Yıl University (YYÜ), sparking accusations of a cover‑up and an assault on press freedom. According to an investigation by journalist Ali Safa Korkut for Kısa Dalga, at least 974 URLs — including news articles, social media posts and entire accounts — have been rendered inaccessible. Six court orders secured by the YYÜ rectorate since 8 September alone targeted 794 URLs, all justified on grounds of “protecting national security and public order.” Kabaiş, a first‑year pre‑school teaching student at YYÜ, disappeared on 27 September 2024 after leaving her state dormitory. On 15 October her body was found on the shore of Lake Van, about 20 kilometers from where she was last seen. Family members say that on the day of the funeral the Van governor and the university’s rector told her father, Nizamettin Kabaiş, that his daug...