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  1. #1
    L'Etranger Senior Member Banquo's Ghost's Avatar
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    Default The real crisis in Turkey

    Someone get LEN out of the building before Mithrandir and Martok find him.

    Turkish Airlines get the hump.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    A job well done is worth celebrating, but Turkish Airlines say staff went too far when they sacrificed a camel.

    To mark the last delivery of 100 aircraft, maintenance workers clubbed together to buy the beast - and then consume it.

    The sacrifice took place at Istanbul international airport.

    "They didn't ask permission," a spokeswoman for the airline told the BBC, adding that the boss of the offending staff had been suspended.

    He will remain off work while the incident is investigated.

    Camel is eaten in Turkey, while the sacrifice of animals - usually sheep - is performed during the Festival of Sacrifice, marking the prophet Ibrahim's willingness to sacrifice his son when God ordered him to.

    "But it wasn't anything to do with that," said Belgin Alisan of Turkish Airlines, which was last week accepted into the Lufthansa-led Star Alliance.

    "They went too far. We are really quite shocked."

    Top-selling daily Hurriyet said 700kg of camel meat had been distributed among the workers.


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  2. #2
    Not affiliated with Red Dwarf. Member Ianofsmeg16's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Hmmm interesting...so Ritual Sacrifice is allowed in Turkey? Whats going to happen to the people that did it? and finally.......what does camel taste like?
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  3. #3
    zombologist Senior Member doc_bean's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    What the... ?


    Next they're going to tell me I can't sacrifice goats anymore ! Where will this end ? We must stop the madness !
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  4. #4
    Liar and Trickster Senior Member Andres's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Quote Originally Posted by Ianofsmeg16
    what does camel taste like?
    Even if it tastes half as bad as a living camel smells, it must be
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  5. #5
    Boy's Guard Senior Member LeftEyeNine's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Wrong news there.

    Turkish Airlines had purchased RJ 100 planes in 1992. One crashed taking 75 lives away and two planes got badly damaged. And the celebration of the sending back of the last one was a bit exaggerated by sacrificing a camel in the airport's apron by the order of the Plane Maintenance chief Şükrü Can. He was eventually sacked.

    I'm disgusted the way the news is presented, let alone its fallacy. Nose-up Western way of attitude again.
    Last edited by LeftEyeNine; 12-14-2006 at 00:12.

  6. #6
    TexMec Senior Member Louis VI the Fat's Avatar
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    Default Re : Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Quote Originally Posted by LeftEyeNine
    Wrong news there.

    Turkish Airlines had purchased RJ 100 planes in 1992. One crashed taking 75 lives away and two planes got badly damaged. And the celebration of the sending back of the last one was a bit exaggerated by sacrificing a camel in the airport's apron by the order of the Plane Maintenance chief Şükrü Can. He was eventually sacked.

    I'm disgusted the way the news is presented, let alone its fallacy. Nose-up Western way of attitude again.
    Come on, LEN, spare us the details and tell what the beast tastes liked roasted...
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  7. #7
    Nobody expects the Senior Member Lemur's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    I had roasted camel snout while traveling in north Africa. It tasted as bad as you would imagine. But I'd be the rest of the camel was great ...

  8. #8
    Master of Few Words Senior Member KukriKhan's Avatar
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    Default Re: Re : Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Quote Originally Posted by Louis VI the Fat
    Come on, LEN, spare us the details and tell what the beast tastes liked roasted...
    According to this Wiki article, it tastes something like beef:

    ...The brisket, ribs and loin are some of the preferred parts of the animal, however it is the hump that is considered a delicacy and most favored. It is reported that camel meat tastes like coarse beef ...
    Be well. Do good. Keep in touch.

  9. #9
    Time Lord Member The_Doctor's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Interesting.

    My uncle once ran over a camel, the locals weren't too happy about it, nor where the guys in the backseats of the car...

  10. #10
    Hope guides me Senior Member Hosakawa Tito's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Quote Originally Posted by Ianofsmeg16
    Hmmm interesting...so Ritual Sacrifice is allowed in Turkey? Whats going to happen to the people that did it? and finally.......what does camel taste like?
    Probably tastes like....chicken.
    "He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose." *Jim Elliot*

  11. #11
    Sovereign Oppressor Member TIE Fighter Shooter Champion, Turkey Shoot Champion, Juggler Champion Kralizec's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Odd news

    *lights a camel*

  12. #12
    Boy's Guard Senior Member LeftEyeNine's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Camel is a common animal of sacrifice. Though camels' habitat is not really Turkey and they are rarely sacrificed to such circumstances, Islam allows sacrificing camels.

    And I didn't ever taste it.

  13. #13

    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Quote Originally Posted by LeftEyeNine
    Camel is a common animal of sacrifice. Though camels' habitat is not really Turkey and they are rarely sacrificed to such circumstances, Islam allows sacrificing camels.

    And I didn't ever taste it.
    Common western stereotype is that Turkey is like Arabia, sand camels and nomads. Now I never knew Islam allowed the sacrificing of camels, would you mid telling us what it symbolises, LEN?

  14. #14
    Nobody expects the Senior Member Lemur's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Update on the poor sod who sacrificed the camel:

    The image of an airport worker raising a large piece of bloodied camel meat on the tarmac on Tuesday adorned the front pages of several newspapers, drawing the wrath of transportation authorities, who promptly sacked the a senior technician on Wednesday.

    Under pressure from the European Union, Turkey has introduced fines for those who slaughter animals outside special facilities. The sacrificing of a camel at Turkey's busiest airport was regarded as a disgrace.

  15. #15
    Friend of Lady Luck Member Mooks's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    I dont see what is wrong with it...

    So you want to sacrifice something valuable to your god, nothing wrong there.
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  16. #16
    Boy's Guard Senior Member LeftEyeNine's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Quote Originally Posted by Hannibal99
    Common western stereotype is that Turkey is like Arabia, sand camels and nomads. Now I never knew Islam allowed the sacrificing of camels, would you mid telling us what it symbolises, LEN?
    Common western way of attitude is medieval hypocrisy.

    We have a sacrifice fest, a religious one dictated by Koran which especially aims at helping the poor. Cattles, sheeps and camels are counted suitable to sacrifice. You take one third of it for yourself, give out one third to your relatives and neighbors and one third to a poor family. Also you help the poor by helping with money, clothes etc. (=zekat). It is all about that. (This year the fest just clashes with the new year's day. Gah!)

  17. #17
    Iron Fist Senior Member Husar's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Quote Originally Posted by LeftEyeNine
    Common western way of attitude is medieval hypocrisy.
    Not surprising, last time I wanted to visit Vienna, I couldn't get in because you were besieging it...
    LEN, I have a question, is there even a single person in Turkey who owns a computer? Does Internet exist in Turkey?
    Answer me quick or feel my sword, Muselmann.


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  18. #18
    Member Member Del Arroyo's Avatar
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    Default Re: The real crisis in Turkey

    Quote Originally Posted by LeftEyeNine
    Common western way of attitude is medieval hypocrisy.
    And the common eastern way of attitude is to always complain about the western way of attitude.

    Please, think about what you say. If I came to your country, and tried to speak your language, and told you that your attitude was all wrong, using incorrect grammar, what would you think of me?

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