International Organization of Turkic Culture

Uluslararası Türk Kültürü Teşkilatı (TÜRKSOY)
International Organization of Turkic Culture
Sovereign (maroon) and other members (red) of TÜRKSOY.
Sovereign (maroon) and other members (red) of TÜRKSOY.
HeadquartersTurkey Ankara, Turkey
Official language Turkish
Members[1]
  • 6 sovereign member states
  • 8 non-sovereign observer states
Leaders
   General Secretary Dusen Kaseinov
Establishment 1993
Website
http://www.turksoy.org.tr

The International Organization of Turkic Culture (Turkish: Uluslararası Türk Kültürü Teşkilatı, TÜRKSOY) is an international cultural organization of countries with Turkic populations, speaking languages belonging to the Turkic language family. Other than being an abbreviation of the former official name "Türk Kültür ve Sanatları Ortak Yönetimi" - Joint Administration of Turkic Culture and Arts, "Türksoy" is a compound noun, in Turkish, made up of the words "Türk" (Turk/ic) and "soy" (ancestry).

The General Secretary of TÜRKSOY is Duisen Kaseinov, former Minister of Culture of Kazakhstan. TÜRKSOY has its headquarters in Ankara, Turkey.

History

International Organization of Turkic Culture, headquarters.

The organization has its roots in meetings during 1992 in Baku and Istanbul, where the ministers of culture from Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Turkey, and Turkmenistan declared their commitment to cooperate in a joint cultural framework. TÜRKSOY was subsequently established by an agreement signed on July 12, 1993 in Almaty.

In 1996, an official cooperation between TÜRKSOY and UNESCO was established, involving mutual consultations and reciprocal representation.[2]

It is announced that TÜRKSOY will be integrated into the Turkic Council, a geopolitical organization of Turkic countries established on November 3, 2009.

Members

As of 2013, TÜRKSOY has six sovereign member states and eight non-sovereign observer states.[1]

Member state Language Notes
 Azerbaijan Azerbaijani
 Kazakhstan Kazakh
 Kyrgyzstan Kyrgyz
 Turkey Turkish
 Turkmenistan Turkmen
 Uzbekistan Uzbek
Observer state Language Notes
 Găgăuzia Gagauz an autonomous region of Moldova.
 Northern Cyprus Turkish a de facto independent republic recognized only by Turkey; see Cyprus dispute.
 Sakha Republic Sakha (Yakut) a federal subject of Russia.
 Tatarstan Tatar a federal subject of Russia.

References

External links

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