● 09.04.11

●● Cablegate: As Gates Goes Lobbying for Microsoft Lock-in Among Turkish Youth, the Protesters Are “Fringe Parties” According to Istanbul Consulate

Posted in Bill Gates, Cablegate, Microsoft at 5:55 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: Bill Gates goes to lobby many parties (including dinner with Prime Minister Erdogan) and dissenting voices of Turks receive no weight at their nation’s consulate

TECHRIGHTS has covered the mischievous lobbying of Microsoft and the Gates Foundation, which often lobby in tandem. The following Cablegate cable provides interesting reading.

↺ Gates Foundation

The Istanbul Consulate acts more like a cheerleader and hardly as an office genuinely concerned with the Turkish people.

>

UNCLAS ISTANBUL 000124

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A

TAGS: ECON, ETRD, EINV, ECPS, TU, Istanbul

SUBJECT: MICROSOFT TARGETS TURKEY

Sensitive but unclassified - not for internet distribution.

This message was coordinated with Embassy Ankara.

1. (U) Summary: In his third trip to Turkey in a little over

a year, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates met in Istanbul with

senior Turkish government and business leaders and announced

a range of new initiatives aimed at increasing internet

penetrationin Turkey. These included a new Turkey web portal

(in cooperation with Turkey's leading media group, Dogan

Holding) and a "My First Computer" campaign in partnership

with Intel and Turk Telecom. The extensively publicized

January 28-30 visit included a dinner with Prime Minister

Erdogan and a town-hall meeting with 2500 students. In his

public comments, Gates praised Turkey's progress in

combatting pirated software. While not announcing any

specific investment plans, he highlighted the fact that

Istanbul serves as Microsoft's regional headquarters for 79

countries in the Middle East and Africa, and predicted that

its footprint here will continue to grow in the years ahead.

End Summary.

2. (SBU) In addition to its Turkey-centered events, Microsoft

had initially planned to take advantage of Gates' presence to

organize a summit of business leaders from throughout the

Middle East and Africa. Following the outbreak of avian

influenza in Eastern Turkey, it put those plans on hold, and

instead targeted local business leaders and students. In

addition to his meeting with Prime Minister Erdogan and

Transport and Communications Minister Yildirim, Gates met

with Microsoft's partners here (including notably Dogan

Holding), and spoke to students (a town hall of 2500 students

from a range of schools gathered at an urban campus in

Istanbul), journalists, and Turkish business leaders.

3. (SBU) While there was no announcement regarding the

planned "Techno-city," which Prime Minister Erdogan announced

last year and which Microsoft has indicated in general terms

that it will support, Gates did announce a range of new

initiatives, including a "My First Computer" project, in

cooperation with Intel and Turk Telecom. Noting that Turkey

lags behind other developed countries with an internet

penetration rate of 16 percent (an estimated 10 million

people using 750,000 computers), he said the project targets

to reach 80 percent of Turkish households through the new PC,

which will be introduced this spring and will cost around 300

USD. Gates said this project will build on Microsoft's work

in partnership with Turkey's Ministry of Education, the

United Nations Development Program (UNDP), and local NGO's,

which has succeeded in bringing internet access to public

spaces in most Turkish communities.

4. (SBU) Gates also met with Dogan Holding Chairman Aydin

Dogan to announce that the two companies will work together

to launch a local search engine to challenge Google's

dominance in the Turkey. The portal will also provide

internet telephone services (VOIP), and will utilize

Microsoft's technical expertise and Dogan's experience in the

local market.

5. (SBU) Speaking to the press, Gates praised Turkey's

progress in reducing the level of pirated software, and noted

Microsoft's own efforts in this regard, in cooperation with

other IT partners in the local Business Software Alliance

(BSA). He underlined the potential Turkey offers with its

young and dynamic population, and highlighted Microsoft's

decision to use Istanbul as a base for its regional

operations in the Middle East and Africa. While disclaiming

any specific investment plans, he predicted the company's

footprint will grow as its activities in the region continue

to expand.

6. (SBU) Comment: While his presence attracted a handful of

protestors from fringe parties, Gates was enthusiastically

welcomed by most Turks, and his visit won wide coverage.

(The fact that Dogan Holding dominates local print and

broadcast media didn't hurt.) Even Istanbul's normally tough

press corps appeared overawed, lobbing mainly softballs in

Gates' extended press conference. While Techno-city is not

on the immediate horizon, Gates made clear that Turkey

figures in Microsoft's future plans. End Comment.

JONES

How charitable. Notice how the Ministry of Education is among Gates’ targets, probably because it can help Gates indoctrinate the young at taxpayers’ expense. █

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