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Selman Ada was born on February 24, 1953, in Ceyhan, Adana, Turkey.
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The cast of Beyaz Sayfa - 2010 includes: Ceyhan Yavuz Handan Zorlu
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It goes to the Mediterranean Sea.
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Black Sea
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Fırat, Dicle, Kızılırmak, Sakarya, Büyük Menderes, Seyhan, Yeşilırmak, Ceyhan, Meriç, Küçük Menderes.
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The cast of Yalniz adam - 1974 includes: Turgut Borali Ceyhan Cem Ugur Salman Erol Tas
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The full name of the BTC Pipeline is the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline. This pipeline carries oil pumped in Azerbaijan through Georgia and then to a Mediterranean port in Turkey.
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The cast of Beyaz kurt - 1972 includes: Ceyhan Akan Giray Alpan Sirri Elitas Deniz Erkanat Ayhan Isik Yusuf Sezer
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The cast of Yarasa adam - Bedmen - 1973 includes: Ceyhan Cem Renan Fosforoglu Nurettin Kaygisiz Yilmaz Kurt Mehmet Ugur
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Seyhan is not a Muslim name. It derives from two places. Germania (now Germany) and Turkey. Turkey is more common and has one of the largest rivers named Seyhan and another named Ceyhan.
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The cast of Muhtesem hirsiz - 1973 includes: Cihan Alp Ceyhan Cem Atif Kaptan Kudret Karadag Tanju Korel Ibrahim Kurt Cevat Kurtulus
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Çatalhüyük means "fork mound". It is a Turkish place name and may refer to either a Neolithic site in Çumra district of Konya Province, Turkey, or a village in Ceyhan district of the Adana Province.
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The major rivers that flow through Turkey are: * Aksu * Aras * Bendimahi * Büyük Menderes * Ceyhan * Çoruh * Deliçay * Euphrates * Firtina * Gediz * Göksu * Hursit Cayi * Ikizdere * Incesu * Karasu * Kizilirmak * Köprüçay * Kücük Menderes * Kura * Manavgat * Sakarya * Seyhan * Tigris * Yesilirmak
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Iclal Aydin has: Performed in "Sicak saatler" in 1998. Played Herself - Host in "Baska yerde yok" in 2000. Played Reyhan in "Vizontele" in 2001. Played Ayfer in "Dedem, gofret ve ben" in 2001. Performed in "Zor Hedef" in 2002. Played Ceyhan in "Vizontele Tuuba" in 2004. Played Eda Aydeniz in "Iki aile" in 2006.
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Semih S. Tezcan has written:
'Reduction of seismic response by viscoelastic dampers =' -- subject(s): Damping, Earthquake resistant design, Seismic waves
'Analysis and design of cable roofs =' -- subject(s): Suspension Roofs
'Soil amplification and case studies =' -- subject(s): Earthquake engineering, Seismic waves, Soil dynamics
'June 27, 1998 Adana-Ceyhan Earthquake, Turkey' -- subject(s): Earthquakes
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· Launch of controversial business with the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline;
· Increase in petrol prices in the UK;
· Explosion of BP refinery in Texas that caused 100 injuries and 15 deaths in 2005;
· Criminal charges due to the spread of 270.000 gallons of crude oil in the Alaskan tundra in 2006;
· Toxic spill of 2,000 gallons of methanol in the oil field (Prudhoe Bay) managed by BP.
· Closing of Alaskan oil wells.
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The cast of Silah arkadaslari - 1978 includes: Ceyhan Cem Ihsan Devrim Oktar Durukan Ismail Hakki Sen Ilhan Hemseri Beyk Imanverdi as Kemal Kadir Inanir as Murat Kudret Karadag as Fedai Ibrahim Kurt as Fedai Abdurrahman Palay as Murat Ata Saka Perihan Savas as Sevda Kadir Savun as Tegmen Zeki Sezer Baki Tamer Ibrahim Ugurlu as Foto Muhabiri Reha Yurdakul
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The cast of Zalim - 1973 includes: Nevin Akkaya as Ayse Irfan Atasoy as Ciriko Cumali Aynur Aydan as Selma Fatma Belgen as Ayse Arap Celal as Fedai Ceyhan Cem Ali Demir as Hakim Yildirim Gencer as Mustafa Isik Osman Han as Kumarhane Sahibi Pekcan Kosar as Doktor Kemal Ibrahim Kurt as Fedai Abdurrahman Palay as Ciriko Cumali Faruk Panter as Almanyali Zeki Sezer as Avukat Ibrahim Ugurlu as Fedai
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The cast of Sevmek - 1974 includes: Hayri Arli Nur Atakan Dogan Bavli Ihsan Baysal as Nuri Ceyhan Cem as Sarkici Ali Demir as Abbas Yadigar Ejder Mesut Engin as Erol Hayri Esen as Sahin Renan Fosforoglu as Bakkal Hamit Haskabal as Engin Kudret Karadag Yavuz Karakas as Arif Sacide Keskin Nevin Nuray as Sarkici Perihan Savas as Leyla Sener Sen Ayton Sert Zeki Sezer Nubar Terziyan as Nikah Memuru Kamran Usluer
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The cast of Vizontele Tuuba - 2004 includes: Demet Akbag as Siti Ana Deniz Akkaya as Deniz Kizi Caner Alkaya as Iso Iclal Aydin as Ceyhan Cezmi Baskin as Latif Sinan Bengier as Kamyoncu Tolga Cevik as Nafiz Ata Demirer as Showmen in Circus Volkan Demirok as Kino Yilmaz Erdogan as Crazy Emin Selim Erdogan as Servet Yasemin Ergene as Aynur Altan Erkekli as Nazmi dogan Idil Firat as Aysel Sernikli Salih Kalyon as Casim Sener Kokkaya as Basri Tuncer Salman as Ahmet Celal Tak as Panayirci Zeynep Tokus as Asiye Erdal Tosun as Manav Sehmus
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The cast of Anadolu ekspresi - 1974 includes: Bahri Ates as Mahkum Ceyhan Cem as Mehtap Faik Coskun as Meyhaneci Ali Demir as Nikah Memuru Sidika Duruer as Mahalleli Ali Ekdal as Gazinocu Hayri Esen as Halil Uysal Renan Fosforoglu as Berber Osman Han as Sefik Kadir Inanir as Halil Uysal Saltuk Kaplangi Sacide Keskin Ahmet Kostarika as Kahveci Yilmaz Kurt as Kumarbaz Necdet Mahfi Ayral as Meyhaneci Sener Sen Ali Sen as Bakkal Faik Tevfik Sen as Fedai Ayton Sert as Osman Reis Zeki Sezer as Savci Nubar Terziyan as Osman Reis Fatos Tez as Mehtap Mehmet Yagmur as Fedai Mustafa Yavuz as Gardiyan
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yes there is current issues in Iraq
one of the main issues in Iraq is oil law or hydrocarbon law. If the law passes, the profit sharing would be open to the foreign companies. Yet Iraqi oil industry has highly nationalized in 1970s. Another issue is Status of Kirkuk. there are 3 main groups that could be counted within Iraq which are Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish. As Kirkuk is rich in oil, its sharing among those groups remains as a question. Besides as Kirkuk - Ceyhan oil pipeline passes through there, it has a value as a transition region. Status of Kirkuk is important for both territorial integrity of Iraq and independence movements of the Northern Iraqi Kurds. Other problems are; KRG (Kurdish regional government), US troops withdrawal- status of forces agreement cited that complete withdrawal will be taken place in 2011- and sectarian violence mainly among Sunni and Shiite factions.
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The cast of Tokmak Nuri - 1975 includes: Anuska Nur Ay as Pakize Ceyhan Cem Ahmet Danyal Topatan as Konuk Oyuncu Cevat Kurtulus Nevin Nuray Yusuf Sezer
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According to the CFE Treaty Article 2.1(B):
The term "area of application" means the entire land territory of the States
Parties in Europe from the Atlantic Ocean to the Ural Mountains, which
includes all the European island territories of the States Parties, including the
Faroe Islands of the Kingdom of Denmark, Svalbard including Bear Island of
the Kingdom of Norway, the islands of Azores and Madeira of the Portuguese
Republic, the Canary Islands of the Kingdom of Spain and Franz Josef Land
and Novaya Zemlya of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. In the case of
the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, the area of application includes all
territory lying west of the Ural River and the Caspian Sea. In the case of the
Republic of Turkey, the area of application includes the territory of the
Republic of Turkey north and west of a line extending from the point of
intersection of the Turkish border with the 39th parallel to Muradiye, Patnos,
Karayazi, Tekman, Kemaliye, Feke, Ceyhan, Dogankent, Gözne and thence to
the sea.
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Yasemin Baytok has: Played Yasemin in "The Bold and the Beautiful" in 1987. Played Ms. LaGrange in "Saved by the Bell: The New Class" in 1993. Played Nazila in "Living Single" in 1993. Played Citizenship Student in "Indecent Proposal" in 1993. Played Cindy in "Frasier" in 1993. Played The Poughkeepsie Woman in "Friends" in 1994. Played Elena Torrance in "Pacific Blue" in 1996. Played Vanessa Lermov in "Night Man" in 1997. Played Centauri Woman in "Babylon 5: In the Beginning" in 1998. Played Yvette Fahd in "A Town Without Pity" in 2002.
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The cast of Katran bebek - 1974 includes: Kubilay Hakan Haydar Karaer Yilmaz Kurt Yilmaz Suiller Seyyal Taner
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Turkey's economy is increasingly driven by its industry and service sectors, although its traditional agriculture sector still accounts for about 30% of employment. An aggressive privatization program has reduced state involvement in basic industry, banking, transport, and communication, and an emerging cadre of middle-class entrepreneurs is adding dynamism to the economy. Turkey's traditional textiles and clothing sectors still account for one-third of industrial employment, despite stiff competition in international markets that resulted from the end of the global quota system. Other sectors, notably the automotive, construction, and electronics industries, are rising in importance and have surpassed textiles within Turkey's export mix. Oil began to flow through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline in May 2006, marking a major milestone that will bring up to 1 million barrels per day from the Caspian to market. Several gas pipelines also are being planned to help move Central Asian gas to Europe via Turkey, which will help address Turkey's dependence on energy imports over the long term. After Turkey experienced a severe financial crisis in 2001, Ankara adopted financial and fiscal reforms as part of an IMF program. The reforms strengthened the country's economic fundamentals and ushered in an era of strong growth - averaging more than 6% annually until 2008, when global economic conditions and tighter fiscal policy caused GDP to contract in 2009, reduced inflation to 6.3% - a 34-year low - and cut the public sector debt-to-GPD ratio below 50%. Turkey's well-regulated financial markets and banking system weathered the global financial crisis and GDP rebounded strongly to 7.3% in 2010, as exports returned to normal levels following the recession. The economy, however, continues to be burdened by a high current account deficit and remains dependent on often volatile, short-term investment to finance its trade deficit. The stock value of FDI stood at $174 billion at year-end 2010, but inflows have slowed considerably in light of continuing economic turmoil in Europe, the source of much of Turkey's FDI. Further economic and judicial reforms and prospective EU membership are expected to boost Turkey's attractiveness to foreign investors. However, Turkey's relatively high current account deficit, uncertainty related to policy-making, and fiscal imbalances leave the economy vulnerable to destabilizing shifts in investor confidence.
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The cast of Coup de foudre - 1988 includes: Joe Abdo as Taxi Driver Michel Albertini Jacky Alpha as The Bartender Jose Alpha as The Driver Pierre Banderet Heinz Bennent Henryk Bista as Taxi Driver Roland Blanche Evelyne Bouix as Suzanne Corinne Coderey Armando Cortez as Caretaker Laurence Curtelin as Victoria Xavier Deluc as David Dora Doll Serge Dupire Trevor Eve as Alphonse Malard Jillali Ferhati as Salam Jessica Forde Roland Giraud Dominic Gould Hugo Granger as Tonio Daniel Grimm Dayle Haddon as Helen Laure Killing as Patricia Gabrielle Lazure Alexandra Leite as Shop Assistant Denis Leloup Philippe Leloup Tanya Lopert as Evelina Gilles Mariani Greg Morris as Monsieur Laurent Rudolf Nureyev Daniel Olbrychski as Jan Bergman Mireille Perrier Isabelle Rondon Mohamed Serraj as Ali Mort Shuman as Mo Hanna Skarzanka as Elvira Catherine Wilkening Celia Williams as Mrs. Smith Zbigniew Zapasiewicz as Doctor France Zobda
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A chronology of key events:
1923 - Assembly declares Turkey a republic and Kemal Ataturk as president.
Istanbul: Europe meets Asia in Turkey's largest city
Former capital of Byzantine, Ottoman empires
1930: Constantinople officially renamed Istanbul
Population: 9.4 million
2005: Islam tests secular Istanbul
2006: Treasure dig threatens Bosphorus rail link
1928 - Turkey becomes secular: clause retaining Islam as state religion removed from constitution.
1925 - Adoption of Gregorian calendar. Prohibition of the fez.
1938 - President Ataturk dies, succeeded by Ismet Inonu.
1945 - Neutral for most of World War II, Turkey declares war on Germany and Japan, but does not take part in combat. Joins United Nations.
1950 - Republic's first open elections, won by opposition Democratic Party.
Military coups
1952 - Turkey abandons Ataturk's neutralist policy and joins Nato.
1960 - Army coup against ruling Democratic Party.
Ottoman Empire: multi-ethnic state lasting more than 600 years
Developed in late 13th century
Extended into south-east Europe, north Africa, Middle East
Replaced by Turkish Republic in 1922
2002: Empire of the Ottomans
BBC Religion & Ethics: The Ottoman Empire
1961 - New constitution establishes two-chamber parliament.
1963 - Association agreement signed with European Economic Community (EEC).
1965 - Suleyman Demirel becomes prime minister - a position he is to hold seven times.
1971 - Army forces Demirel's resignation after spiral of political violence.
1974 - Turkish troops invade northern Cyprus.
1976 - Earthquake kills more than 5,000 people in western Van province.
1978 - US trade embargo resulting from invasion lifted.
1980 - Military coup follows political deadlock and civil unrest. Imposition of martial law.
1982 - New constitution creates seven-year presidency, and reduces parliament to single house.
1983 - General election won by Turgut Ozal's Motherland Party (ANAP).
PKK war
1984 - Turkey recognises "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus."
Kurdistan Workers' Party launches separatist guerrilla war in southeast.
Kemal Ataturk, founder of the Turkish republic
Born in 1881
President from 1923
Died in 1938
2005: Ataturk diaries to remain secret
1987 - Turkey applies for full EEC membership.
1990 - Turkey allows US-led coalition against Iraq to launch air strikes from Turkish bases.
1992 - 20,000 Turkish troops enter Kurdish safe havens in Iraq in anti-PKK operation.
Turkey joins Black Sea alliance.
1993 - Tansu Ciller becomes Turkey's first woman prime minister, and Demirel elected president.
Ceasefire with PKK breaks down.
1995 - Major military offensive launched against the Kurds in northern Iraq, involving some 35,000 Turkish troops.
Ciller coalition collapses. Pro-Islamist Welfare Party wins elections but lacks support to form government - two major centre-right parties form anti-Islamist coalition.
Turkey enters EU customs union.
1996 - Centre-right coalition falls. Welfare Party leader Necmettin Erbakan heads first pro-Islamic government since 1923.
1997 - Coalition resigns after campaign led by the military, replaced by a new coalition led by the centre-right Motherland Party of Prime Minister Mesut Yilmaz.
Jailed: Kurdistan Workers' Party leader Abdullah Ocalan
Profile: Abdullah Ocalan
1999: Jeremy Bowen on Ocalan arrest
1999: PM Ecevit says Ocalan to get fair trial
1998 January - Welfare Party - the largest in parliament - banned. Yilmaz resigns amid corruption allegations, replaced by Bulent Ecevit.
1999 February - PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan captured in Kenya.
1999 July - Ocalan receives death sentence, later commuted to life imprisonment.
1999 August - Devastating earthquake with epicentre at Izmit in Turkey's heavily populated northwest kills 17,000 people.
1999 November - Second quake in same region kills hundreds more.
Into the new millennium
2000 - Ahmet Necdet Sezer takes over from Suleyman Demirel as president.
2001 January - Diplomatic row with France after French National Assembly recognises the killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire as genocide.
2001 May - European Court of Human Rights finds Turkey guilty of violating the rights of Greek Cypriots during its occupation of northern Cyprus.
2001 June - Constitutional Court bans opposition pro-Islamic Virtue Party, saying it had become focus of anti-secular activities. New pro-Islamist party Saadet is set up by former Virtue Party members in July.
2001 November - British construction firm Balfour Beatty and Impregilo of Italy pull out of the controversial Ilisu dam project. Swiss bank UBS follows suit in February 2002.
Talks on EU entry could take years
Q&A: Turkey's EU entry talks
2002 January - Turkish men are no longer regarded in law as head of the family. The move gives women full legal equality with men, 66 years after women's rights were put on the statute books.
2002 March - Turkish and Greek governments agree to build a gas pipeline along which Turkey will supply Greece with gas.
2002 July - Pressure for early elections as eight ministers including Foreign Minister Cem resign over ailing PM Ecevit's refusal to step down amid growing economic, political turmoil. Cem launches new party committed to social democracy, EU membership.
2002 August - Parliament approves reforms aimed at securing EU membership. Death sentence to be abolished except in times of war and bans on Kurdish education, broadcasting to be lifted.
Islamist party victorious
2002 November - Islamist-based Justice and Development Party (AK) wins landslide election victory. Party promises to stick to secular principles of constitution. Deputy leader Abdullah Gul appointed premier.
Secularists see headscarves as symbols of radical Islam
2006: Headscarf issue challenges Turkey
2002 December - Constitutional changes allow head of ruling AK, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, to run for parliament, and so to become prime minister. He had been barred from public office because of previous criminal conviction.
2003 March - AK leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan wins seat in parliament. Within days Abdullah Gul resigns as prime minister and Erdogan takes over.
Parliament decides not to allow deployment of US forces ahead of war in Iraq but allows US use of Turkish air space. It authorises dispatch of Turkish forces into Kurdish areas of northern Iraq.
2003 May - More than 160 people, many of them schoolchildren trapped in a dormitory, die in an earthquake in the Bingol area.
2003 June-July - Eyeing future EU membership, parliament passes laws easing restrictions on freedom of speech, Kurdish language rights, and on reducing political role of military.
Istanbul attacks
2003 November - 25 people are killed and more than 200 injured when two car bombs explode near Istanbul's main synagogue. Days later two co-ordinated suicide bombings at the British consulate and a British bank in the city kill 28 people.
2004 January - Turkey signs protocol banning death penalty in all circumstances, a move welcomed in EU circles.
Istanbul's historic spice market - one of the city's main bazaars
2004 February - More than 60 people killed when apartment block in city of Konya collapses.
2004 March - At least two people killed in a suspected suicide attack on a building housing a Masonic lodge in Istanbul.
2004 May - PKK says it plans to end a ceasefire because of what it calls annihilation operations against its forces.
2004 June - State TV broadcasts first Kurdish-language programme.
Four Kurdish activists, including former MP Leyla Zana, freed from jail.
Nato heads of state gather for summit in Istanbul.
2004 July - Three die in car bomb attack in southeastern town of Van. Authorities accuse the PKK of involvement which it denies.
2004 September - Parliament approves penal reforms introducing tougher measures to prevent torture and violence against women. Controversial proposal on criminalising adultery dropped.
EU talks
Turkey maintains troops in breakaway northern Cyprus
Q&A: Cyprus peace process
2004 December - EU leaders agree to open talks in 2005 on Turkey's EU accession. The decision, made at a summit in Brussels, follows a deal over an EU demand that Turkey recognise Cyprus as an EU member.
2005 January - New lira currency introduced as six zeroes are stripped from old lira, ending an era in which banknotes were denominated in millions.
2005 May - Parliament approves amendments to new penal code after complaints that the previous version restricted media freedom. The EU welcomes the move but says the code still fails to meet all its concerns on human rights.
2005 June - Parliament overturns veto by secularist President Sezer on government-backed amendment easing restrictions on teaching of Koran.
2005 July - Six killed in bomb attack on a train in the east. Officials blame the PKK.
Turkey's army is the second largest in Nato after the US
2006: Turkish army keeps eye on politicians
2006: Turkey approves Lebanon troops
2006: Big army cuts planned by Turkey
Explosion on minibus in resort town of Kusadasi kills at least four people.
2005 October - EU membership negotiations officially launched after intense bargaining.
2005 November - Multi-billion-dollar Blue Stream pipeline carrying Russian gas under the Black Sea to Turkey opens in the port of Samsun.
2006 March - 14 suspected Kurdish rebels killed by security forces.
2006 April - At least a dozen people are killed in clashes between Kurdish protesters and security forces in the south-east. Several people are killed in related unrest in Istanbul.
2006 May - Gunman opens fire in Turkey's highest court, killing a prominent judge and wounding four others. Thousands protest against what they perceive as an Islamic fundamentalist attack.
2006 June - Parliament passes new anti-terror law which worries the EU and which rights groups criticise as an invitation to torture.
2006 July - Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline opened at ceremony in Turkey.
Murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink shocked Turkey
2007: Turkish-Armenian writer shunned silence
In pictures: Dink killing
2006 August-September - Bombers target resorts and Istanbul. Shadowy separatist group Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAC) claims responsibility for some attacks and warns it will turn "Turkey into hell".
2006 30 September - Kurdish separatist group, the PKK, declares a unilateral ceasefire in operations against the military.
2006 December - EU partially freezes Turkey's membership talks because of Ankara's failure to open its ports and airports to Cypriot traffic.
2007 January - Journalist and Armenian community leader Hrant Dink is assassinated. The murder provokes outrage in Turkey and Armenia. Prime Minister Erdogan says a bullet has been fired at democracy and freedom of expression.
Secularist protests
2007 April - Tens of thousands of supporters of secularism rally in Ankara, aiming to pressure Prime Minister Erdogan not to run in presidential elections because of his Islamist background.
Ruling AK party puts forward Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul as its candidate after Mr Erdogan decides not to stand. He narrowly fails to win in the first round.
2007 May - Parliament brings forward national elections to 22 July to try end the standoff between secularists and Islamists over the choice of the next president.
Parliament gives initial approval to a constitutional change allowing the president to be elected by a popular vote, but the amendment is vetoed by President Sezer.
Tension mounts on Turkey-Iraq border amid speculation that Turkey may launch an incursion to tackle Kurdish rebels.
Bomb blast in Ankara kills six and injures 100. PKK denies responsibility.
2007 July - AK Party wins parliamentary elections.
2007 August - Abdullah Gul is elected president.
2007 October - Diplomatic row with United States after a US congressional committee recognises the killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire as genocide.
Parliament gives go-ahead for military operations in Iraq in pursuit of Kurdish rebels.
Voters in a referendum back plans to have future presidents elected by the people instead of by parliament.
2007 December - Turkey launches a series of air strikes on fighters from the Kurdish PKK movement inside Iraq.
Headscarf dispute
2008 February - Thousands protest plans to allow women to wear the Islamic headscarf to university.
Parliament approves constitutional amendments which will pave the way for women to be allowed to wear the Islamic headscarf in universities.
2008 July - Petitition to the constitutional court to have the governing AK Party banned for alllegedly undermining the secular constitution fails by a narrow margin.
2008 October - Trial starts of 86 suspected members of a shadowy ultra-naltionalist group accused of plotting a series of attacks and provoking a military coup against the government.
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