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Slipping In Turkey: An Islamist Government's Commitment To Democrati

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  • Slipping In Turkey: An Islamist Government's Commitment To Democrati

    SLIPPING IN TURKEY: AN ISLAMIST GOVERNMENT'S COMMITMENT TO DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES IS LOOKING SHAKY

    The Washington Post
    November 23, 2009 Monday

    RECEP TAYYIP ERDOGAN has been the protagonist of an epic liberalization
    of politics in Turkey. The victory of his mildly Islamist AK Party
    in a 2002 general election was itself a breakthrough; even more so
    was his government's defeat of repeated attempts by the military and
    courts to remove it from power. Mr. Erdogan is pushing through historic
    reforms of Turkey's treatment of its Kurdish minority and recently
    took a major step toward opening the country's border with Armenia.

    Yet, as his tenure lengthens, it is becoming evident that Mr. Erdogan's
    commitment to democratic principles and Western values is far from
    complete. As Turkey's prospects of joining the European Union have
    dimmed, the government's foreign policy has taken a nasty turn: Shrill
    denunciations of Israel have been accompanied by increasing coziness
    with the criminal rulers of Iran, Syria and Sudan. Mr. Erdogan recently
    declared that Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, who has been
    indicted for war crimes in Darfur, was welcome in Turkey because
    "a Muslim can never commit genocide."

    Even more concerning is Mr. Erdogan's treatment of the Turkish media.

    Frustrated by hostility toward his government by media conglomerates
    that formed part of Turkey's traditional secular establishment,
    the prime minister and his allies have resorted to increasingly
    heavy-handed measures. Two years ago a forced sale of the country's
    second-biggest newspaper placed it in the hands of a company headed
    by Mr. Erdogan's son-in-law. Once critical, it is now predictably
    pro-government.

    Now the government is threatening to destroy Turkey's largest
    media company, Dogan Yayin. The conglomerate, which controls seven
    newspapers, 28 magazines and three television channels -- including
    Turkey's version of CNN -- has been hit with an escalating series of
    tax bills based on questionable audits of past filings. The latest
    one, delivered in September, now stands at some $3.3 billion --
    a sum greater than the value of Dogan Yayin and its parent company.

    Faced with sharp criticism by the European Union, Mr. Erdogan
    and his foreign minister have insisted that the tax bills are a
    "technical matter"; in one interview the prime minister compared them
    to the tax case brought against gangster Al Capone. The parallel was
    unintentionally revealing. Mr. Erdogan's real problem is not with
    the company's supposed tax evasion but with its tough reporting on
    his government -- beginning with reports about an Islamic charity
    that may have illegally funneled money to his party.

    Turkish journalists say that a pall of fear has fallen across
    their business. Editors practice self-censorship. Many journalists
    are believed to be among the more than 100,000 people whose phones
    have been tapped by the government in recent years. Some, including
    the chief executive of Dogan Yayin, have been swept up in a murky
    investigation of alleged coup plotting.

    Mr. Erdogan and his party were once seen by many in Washington as a
    model for how pious Muslims could practice democratic politics. That
    image is rapidly darkening. If it is not to be extinguished, Mr.

    Erdogan must stop coddling Muslim dictators -- and stop following
    their practice of silencing domestic opposition.
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