One day at the end of October of 1989 - it must have been the 30th - I was standing inside one of the recording studios of the BBC, Bush House in London. In front of me a British studio manager was trying to control the sound coming out from a chaotic console. In front of him, behind the glass separation, two Turkish radio journalists from the BBC Turkish Section were broadcasting live. There was a lot of commotion in the room where I was standing. Two or three Turkish production (...)
If there was a genre such as academic journalism, Kızılyürek’s book ‘Glafkos Clerides: The Course of a Country’ would certainly be considered a good example.
When I had met Niyazi Kızılyürek a few months ago in Brussels, the book had already been finished. And he was full with an enthusiasm of a journalist who had managed to get a “scoop”. “Yes, we visited him at his home by the sea, we talked for hours, for days; he told me things that he did not tell to anyone before. Yes, he is 87 and in a very (...)
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