Calis Beach and Fethiye Turkey Discussion Forum
Calis Beach Forum => Calis Beach Questions and Information => Topic started by: Scunner on June 05, 2013, 10:07:12 AM
-
Don't panic - this is from Simon Calder - Travel Editor at the UK Independent Newspaper - I'll make this a sticky topic so people can find it easily:
Turkey travel Q&A amid protests
"The civil strife in Turkey has raised concerns among many holidaymakers planning summer trips to Turkey, especially to the largest city, Istanbul. How concerned should you be – and what are your rights and options should you decide not to travel?
Q: What is the latest Foreign Office advice to prospective travellers to Turkey?
A: Basically the same as it has been for months: there are a few areas in the east and south east of Turkey that travellers are urged to avoid, particularly on the Syrian border, but those are not places that tourists would find themselves.
A news broadcast by the BBC at the weekend saying that the Foreign Office warns against “all but essential travel to Turkey” was wrong; see bit.ly/TurkFCO for the latest advice.
In the cities, the Foreign Office says “You should avoid all demonstrations and leave the area if one develops,” and advises that you “allow extra time for local travel, particularly airport transfers”.
Q: How does the situation compare with other countries such as Egypt which have seen similar unrest?
A: The pictures of Taksim Square in Istanbul have similarities with those of Tahrir Square in Cairo, but the conflicts are very different. This isn’t about overthrowing a dictatorship – the Justice and Development Party of the current prime minister, Mr Erdogan, received almost 50 per cent of votes at the most recent election, performing far better than any other party.
Even if the level of civil disruption were to get as intense as it did in Egypt, it is unlikely that the Foreign Office would do any more than it did in Egypt – which boiled down to: “If you’re in the big cities, get out – but if you’re in a coastal resort, stay put”. That proved to be shrewd advice in Egypt.
Were violence to flare in Turkish cities – particularly Istanbul, the capital Ankara, and the third city, Izmir – the FCO might well take a similar view.
Q: Suppose the Foreign Office were to warn against “All but essential travel” to Turkey’s biggest city, Istanbul - what would the legal implications be?
A: This is all strictly hypothetical. But were you to go to the city, your travel insurance will be invalidated. UK tour operators would be obliged to stop sending people there, and to bring back clients already in the area. The scheduled airlines, though, will keep flying – and there is no obligation for them to allow passengers cancellations. British Airways, however, has told The Independent that it will allow passengers booked to Istanbul to defer travel to the city until later this month.
Q: And if you’re simply unhappy about going to Turkey?
A: Around 2.5m British travellers are booked to go to Turkey this summer - some of whom will be thinking “I wasn’t expecting sun, sea and tear gas”. Bluntly, no holiday company will let you cancel without penalty. If the situation deteriorates, it’s possible that they may let you switch to a different holiday with the same company, but that’s a benefit that is entirely at the firm’s discretion. "
-
Please share on Facebook by clicking their F logo just below - before Calis closes due to lack of interest ;)
-
sounds reasonable enough, we're going tomorrow Keith, so the info was useful, thanks.
-
Dont rub it in Moe! Good post though theres a few folk at work I'll pass this on to!
-
I m out there mid July and tbh I'm not concerned ive also spoken to ppl at work and so on and it doesn't seem to be stopping ppl going, I just want the exchange rate to go above 3-1 which is purely selfish
-
Just spent 5 weeks in Calis/Fethiye and this was the only thing we saw one night in Fethiye. NO problems that affected us anywhere.
(http://s21.postimg.org/olrzl50mb/DSC04137.jpg) (http://postimg.org/image/olrzl50mb/)
-
I have just come back from 2 months in Turkey. Two of those weeks I travelled from Fethiye to Trabzon on the black sea coast ( on my own) . Then I travelled down the borders of Georgia, Armenia, Iran, Iraq to within 20 miles of the Syrian border with a guide (just the 2 of us because everyone else on the tour had cancelled). Then on my own I travelled back from Diyabakir to Fethiye. I felt perfectly safe and did not see one hint of trouble. The only demonstration I saw was in Fethiye which was completely peaceful.