
U104-B 3-phase Connection
This type of meter is used to fuel dispensers for measurement of pressurized oil.
Materials:
Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
Package:
Net Weight:
1.7kg/case of 1
Gross Weight: 1.9kg/case of 1
Dimension: 36x15x15cm/case of 1
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
ers are being steadily eroded by a string of
reforms made necessary for Turkey to win its prized start of membership talks with the European Union last
October. Mr Erdogan s supporters blamed agents of “the deep state�of rogue security officials and bureaucrats for
last week s attack. Their aim is said to be to torpedo the EU process, weaken the government and bully Mr Erdogan
into ditching his ambition fuel dispenser s to succeed Mr Sezer when he retires next year.
Mr Arslan s bizarre web of connections suggest that he did not act alone. His alleged accomplices include a former
army captain, who was dumped at an Istanbul hospital with self-inflicted knife wounds after the killing, and sundry
ultra-nationalists involved in extra-judicial killings, extortion rackets and attacks against Christians and Kurds. But
even if the affair proves to be a conspiracy, Mr Erdogan still needs to ask himself why so many Turks blamed the
government.
One reason may be that, just like his pro-secular critics, Mr Erdogan has been decidedly selective in his sense of
democracy and justice. He has loudly denounced court rulings against the headscarf. Yet, when an Istanbul
prosecutor pressed charges against the country s best-known author, Orhan Pamuk, for speaking about the mass
killings of Armenians by the Ottomans in 1915, Mr Erdogan did not utter a squeak of reproach. His claims to defend
the in fuel dispenser terests of all Turks, not just religious ones, are beginning to ring hollow.
Yet those who are baying for the government s blood should think twice as well. For all his shortcomings, Mr
Erdogan has brought Turkey greater freedom and stability than any of his pro-secular predecessors. His attempts
to increase Islam s visibility in public life have remained just that. Although a recent poll suggests that Mr
Erdogan s popularity rating has slipped from 35% to 28%, his party still has twice as much support as the pro-
secular Republican People s par fuel dispenser ty. Indeed, the lack of a credible opposition remains one of Turkey s biggest
weakne