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Grey Wolves training camps were camps for ideological and paramilitary training that were established by Alparslan Türkeş. The camps specialised in providing urban warfare training to members of the Grey Wolves. The camps were founded in 1968 and fully dissolved by 1978. [1]
During the Cold War, an important asset was the Counter-Guerrilla, and the Grey Wolves; the paramilitary youth branch of the Nationalist Movement Party. [2] Before the death of Counter-Guerrilla Alparslan Türkeş, the far-right paramilitary Grey Wolves were used to attack leftists.
Following the November 2020 ban of the Grey Wolves in France for hate speech and violence, [266] [267] and the calls for similar actions to be taken in the Netherlands and Germany, [268] [269] [270] the European Parliament urged, on 20 May 2021, that the 27 member states of the European Union to designate the Grey Wolves as a terrorist group ...
The commander of the group, Alparslan Çelik, is a member of the Grey Wolves. The subdivisions are the Brigade of Mountain Turkmen, the Sultan Mehmet the Conqueror Brigade, the Sultan Selim Brigade, and the 1071 Raiders Brigade [3] The 2nd Coastal Division has less than 500 fighters as of the end of 2015, although the group claims to have 2,000 ...
The Susurluk scandal (Turkish: Susurluk skandalı) or Susurluk accident (Turkish: Susurluk kazası), was a 1996 political scandal in Turkey that exposed a close relationship between the Turkish government, the ultra-nationalistic paramilitary Grey Wolves organization and the Turkish mafia.
The MHP stated that their economic policies would create 700,000 jobs, increase the national income per person to $13.3K, and increase exports to $238 billion while keeping annual growth at 5.2 percent between 2016 and 2019, although this did not occur, as the GDP per capita and standard of living plummeted in Turkey from 12,614 USD in 2014 to ...
Wisconsin rules allowed gray wolves to be shot or poisoned year-round and provided a bounty for dead wolves into the 1950s. By the 1960s wolves persisted in the Lower 48 only in northern Minnesota ...
At the time of the arrest of the VKGB leadership in mid-2007, it was estimated to have 2-3000 members. [2] It had been founded in April 2005 by former Grey Wolves as part of a new form of ultranationalism labelled " ulusalcılık " with a greater emphasis on anti-imperialism and more open to alliances with the left. [ 3 ]