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| The Turkish Golf Federation has plans to add 100 new golf courses to Turkey’s current scanty tally of less than 20. Golf tourism is already experiencing strong growth in Turkey and revenues should hit 500 million euros by 2010, but now Turkey really means business and intends to take golf giant Spain on head-to-head with the Aegean province of Mugla as its secret weapon. There were 359 federated golf courses in Spain at last count, around 60 of these concentrated along the Costa del Sol generating Málaga province alone 900 million euros in 2006. It’s clear that Turkey has some catching up to do but with one and a half times the area (770,760km² versus 499,542km²), a similar climate thanks to sharing the same latitude. |
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| Property in Turkey has for some time now been a popular choice for anybody wanting to purchase a second home as a holiday home, real estate in Turkey is a booming business with many tourists spending a small percentage of their time viewing Turkish property whilst on holiday, estate agents can offer inspection trips to combine property viewing with a short holiday, agents will choose a selection of properties for potential buyers of Turkish property to view based on their requirements discussed beforehand, agents will provide a private car and accompany potential buyers on viewings in the hope of getting a sale, property in turkey is real value for money, apartments for as little as 55,000 € or a villa for less than 200,000 €, buyers can choose between coastal areas for Turkish property or inland villages when purchasing real estate in Turkey |
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| Two demonstrators have died today in southeastern Turkey as clashes between Kurdish protestors and police continued for a third day. A 20-year-old died of a bullet wound in the town of Yuksekova in Hakkari province, which borders Iran and Iraq, after clashes erupted today when a crowd of demonstrators defied an official ban on a planned gathering to mark Newroz, or the Kurdish New Year. A 35-year-old man died earlier in a hospital in the eastern city of Van, where he had been taken with a bullet wound yesterday |
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| A writer whose novel put her on trial for “insulting Turkishness” made the longlist for a prestigious British fiction prize on Tuesday. Elif Shafak, author of the bestseller “The Bastard of Istanbul” was one of 20 writers longlisted for the Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction. Ms. Shafak was prosecuted in Turkey over comments made by characters in her book about the 1915 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks. She was acquitted by an Istanbul court in 2006. The book interweaves stories of a Turkish and an Armenian family in the United States and Istanbul. |
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| Turkey went into the game having had their last three friendlies end in goalless draws and this proved to continue the trend. This was another uneventful fixture and most certainly not for the neutrals. The game was not necessarily boring, but neither did it provide the basic thrills of a competitive game. There was simply not enough at stake for either side to really commit to playing attractive, dynamic football. Neither side fielded their full-strength line-ups that had been seen during the Euro 2008 qualifiers; Turkey had introduced four changes, while Sweden had two debutants and another fairly new player. Both sides made a lot of changes in the second half. |
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Family fun in the Turkish sun
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