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Against All Odds: Human Rights Activism in Turkey

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  • Against All Odds: Human Rights Activism in Turkey

    ZNet | Europe

    Against All Odds
    Human Rights Activism in Turkey

    by Khatchig Mouradian; April 05, 2006

    `I refuse to buy my freedom of speech by paying money,' said Eren Keskin,
    the Head of the Istanbul Branch of the Human Rights Association of Turkey,
    during a press conference in Istanbul on the 22nd of March. A few days
    earlier, a Turkish court had sentenced her to 10 months' imprisonment for
    insulting the country's military. The sentence was then converted to a fine
    of 6000 New Turkish Liras, which Keskin is refusing to pay, however, saying
    that she will go to prison instead. Moreover, she asserts: `I will continue
    to express both verbally and in writing my thoughts, which are banned
    unlawfully by the ruling powers, because we are not the ones who should
    change; they are.'

    `The case will be heard by the Court of Appeals. It will take several months
    before it reaches a verdict. In the meantime campaigns in support of freedom
    of speech in Turkey both at home and abroad will help a lot to influence the
    general climate in Turkey for greater democracy,' told me Ayse Gunaysu, an
    activist in the organization headed by Keskin.

    The court sentence against Keskin was based on the notorious Article 301 of
    the Turkish Penal Code, which states that public denigration of Turkishness,
    the Grand National Assembly (Turkey's legislature) or the Government of the
    Republic of Turkey, the judicial institutions of the state, as well as the
    military and security structures are punishable by imprisonment of between
    six months and three years. In recent months, dozens of Turkish activists
    and intellectuals, including the world-renowned author Orhan Pamuk, have
    been charged under this article.

    Keskin, who is also the founder of the Project for Legal Aid to Victims of
    Rape and Sexual Assault Under Custody, had been accused of `insulting' the
    Turkish military big time in 2002, after giving a speech in Köln, Germany
    about cases of sexual assault against women inmates by the state security
    forces in Turkey. Keskin explains: `In my presentation under the topic
    `Sexual Violence Perpetrated by the State,' I shared with the audience
    certain findings of our project, which had been going since 1997. I said
    that sexual torture was used as a systematic method of psychological warfare
    and that victims of such torture were afraid to file complaints against the
    security forces.'

    I discussed with Eren Keskin issues related to human rights violations in
    Turkey in late March, a few days after the recent court ruling. Taking into
    account the oft-repeated assertions that Turkey had made great strides
    towards respect for human rights in the last few years in its quest for EU
    membership, I asked her whether these changes were radical or cosmetic. `I
    don't believe that the changes that have been made or are being made in this
    process are radical,' she replied. `I don't think that the state has any
    intention to change, because the changes introduced have no power to
    transform the essence of the system. Yet we have to admit that they have at
    least provided an atmosphere where certain issues are being discussed.'

    Thou Shalt not Insult the Army

    The generals in Turkey consider themselves the guardians of the country's
    secular constitution and they have an established tradition of directly
    intervening in politics, including a number of direct and indirect military
    coups since 1960. In Keskin's opinion, all legislative, executive and
    judicial powers in Turkey are still under their control. `The military in
    Turkey not only determines both domestic and foreign policy, but also enjoys
    huge economic power through one of Turkey's biggest business groups, OYAK,
    which operates literally in all sectors of the economy, from banking to
    tourism. Moreover, all OYAK companies are exempt from any tax liability,'
    explained Keskin. Hence, she believes that the main impediment to improving
    Turkey's human rights record is the military.

    `Today, even those who define themselves as being part of the left in Turkey
    do not question the taboos determined by the `red lines,' which the military
    has set,' she said, noting that overcoming the military's domination of the
    state is extremely difficult in Turkey.

    `Domestic Enemies'

    As this article is being written, thousands of protesters, mostly Kurds, are
    clashing with the Turkish police in the southeast of the country. For
    decades, Turkey has failed to find a decent solution to its Kurdish problem.
    Ankara is reluctant to grant the most basic of cultural and political rights
    to the millions of Kurds, who live mainly in the country's southeast, where
    the PKK, the Kurdistan Workers' Party, unleashed an armed struggle against
    the Turkish state in the 1980s.

    `Kurds are one of the `domestic enemies' that this system, controlled by the
    military, needs to create in order to sustain its domination,' asserted
    Keskin. `Failure in providing any solution to this issue makes the military
    all the more powerful. Even the minor progress made lately in this field -
    achieved at enormous cost and partly the outcome of the EU accession process
    - does not change the fact that `the policy of `non-solution' still
    dominates the government's approach to the Kurdish issue.'

    State of Denial

    For decades, the greatest of all taboos in Turkey has been the Armenian
    genocide of 1915. In recent years, a number of intellectuals in the country
    have started to speak up about this issue, calling upon Turkey to face its
    past, oftentimes at the cost of being persecuted or sued under Article 301.
    `The Turkish official thesis regarding the Armenian genocide is still very
    influential in the street and in academia, although there are efforts to
    overcome this domination,' said Keskin, when asked about Ankara's policy of
    denial towards the annihilation by the ruling Committee of Union and
    Progress (CUP) and under the cover of World War I of an estimated a million
    and a half Armenians in the dying years of the Ottoman Empire.

    The overwhelming majority of genocide scholars and many parliaments around
    the world recognize this instance of mass slaughter as a classic case of
    genocide. The descendents of the genocide victims, in turn, continue to
    demand that Turkey, too, recognize the genocidal intent behind the
    decimation of the Armenians, who lived on their ancestral land. The Turkish
    government vehemently denies, however, that there was a planned destruction
    of an entire ethnic group. It also argues that the number of victims is
    vastly exaggerated.

    According to Keskin, `there is no real break with the ideology of the CUP
    not only among the extremists but also among those who consider themselves
    part of the democratic opposition in Turkey. The ideology that led to the
    Armenian genocide was a very important element of the founding ideology of
    the Republic of Turkey.'

    Keskin has little faith that Turkey will come to terms with its past in the
    near future. `The general mindset of the majority of Turkish society,
    including a significant part of the left, has been shaped under the
    influence of this ideology. It is for this reason that I don't believe much
    progress can be made in the short run,' she said. `However, I believe
    recognition of the genocide is crucial. Turkish people should acknowledge
    the sufferings of the Armenians, empathize with them and apologize for what
    happened in 1915.'

    * * *

    Eren Keskin and many of her colleagues in Turkey operate in an environment
    of intimidation and threats. `We, the human rights activists, have learned,
    throughout these years, how to live with fear and to go on despite its
    persistence,' she said. `Up till now 14 executives and members of our Human
    Rights Association have been killed by what we call the counter-guerilla
    units. I myself have been the target of two armed attacks. I still receive
    death threats. Of course all these generate some fear in me, but if there is
    one thing, which we have learned by now, is to continue with our struggle
    despite fear. I guess we owe this to our faith in what we do.'

    Indeed, it is on this faith that many people are counting.


    Khatchig Mouradian is a Lebanese-Armenian writer and journalist.
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