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Turkey's EU Membership Depends On The Kurds

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  • Turkey's EU Membership Depends On The Kurds

    TURKEY'S EU MEMBERSHIP DEPENDS ON THE KURDS
    by Harry Sterling, Citizen Special

    Ottawa Citizen, Canada
    April 10, 2006 Monday
    Final Edition

    'The security forces will intervene against the pawns of terrorism,
    no matter if they are children or women."

    With these chilling words Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    warned Kurdish families that women and children could be killed by
    security forces if they continued to participate in anti-government
    demonstrations in Turkey's violence-wracked southeast region, homeland
    to the nation's large Kurdish minority.

    Mr. Erdogan's warning came following several days of clashes between
    Kurds and riot police in various locations in the region. In the town
    of Kiziltepe, thousands of Kurds took to the streets, hurling rocks
    and Molotov cocktails at police. The local headquarters of Mr.
    Erdogan's Islamic-based Justice and Development Party, AK, were
    set ablaze.

    Three children died among eight killed during clashes with riot police
    in the capital city of Diyarbakir. Three died elsewhere.

    Mr. Erdogan claimed terrorists were deliberately using children to
    gain sympathy. Kurdish representatives insisted the children were
    innocent bystanders. The government praised security forces for their
    "restraint" during the violence.

    The anti-government riots erupted after recent funerals for 14 alleged
    Kurdish insurgents from the Kurdistan Workers' Party, PKK, killed by
    the Turkish military. A funeral rally in Diyarbakir, numbering 10,000,
    erupted into a riot, with Kurds calling for "revenge." Some mourners
    waved flags of the banned PKK.

    Local Kurdish leaders said the unrest was the worst in more than a
    decade and denounced the government for its "policy of violence."

    They said the wide support for the demonstrations was symptomatic
    of anger over the second-class treatment accorded Kurds, many
    without jobs for years, others living in cramped temporary shelters,
    thousands forced to flee their homes during fighting between the PKK
    and military.

    The European Union -- which Turkey wants to join -- has expressed
    growing concern over the upsurge in violence. It has urged the
    government to improve the cultural and linguistic rights of the
    Kurdish community, a process that the Erdogan government had already
    begun since coming to power three years ago.

    However, some within the EU question the true commitment of Turkey
    to continue reforms giving Kurds and other minorities greater human
    rights. In their view, the dismantling of various restrictions on
    minority rights has more to do with improving Turkey's acceptability
    to become a member of the EU than with any true desire to improve
    the rights and conditions of Kurds -- or other small minorities,
    like the Armenians and Greeks.

    Although the Erdogan government has now allowed the Kurdish language
    to be used in the media, and in schools under certain circumstances,
    critics say such apparent steps forward are essentially window dressing
    to appease the EU. The violence of recent days will only reinforce
    this viewpoint.

    Unfortunately for Turkey, the issue of growing anti-foreigner,
    anti-Muslim sentiment within European nations could further undercut
    its EU prospects.

    The populations of many countries, particularly France, Germany,
    Austria, Belgium and the Netherlands, increasingly see Muslim Turkey's
    membership as threatening their countries' traditional cultures
    and values.

    Former French president Valery Giscard d'Estaing bluntly opposes Turkey
    joining, saying its membership could destroy the future integration
    of EU countries. Germany's new chancellor, Angela Merkel, appears
    ambivalent about membership, seemingly favouring instead a partnership
    of some kind. Britain however, remains in favour.

    Although Mr. Erdogan's relatively moderate and pragmatic policies
    had lessened concerns over his party's pro-Islamic roots -- improving
    considerably his government's image, especially vis a vis Greece --
    some recent developments cause concern among European and other states.

    His government's hosting of a senior Hamas leader, Khaled Mashal,
    and an invitation to the radical Iraqi Shiite cleric, Muqtada al-Sadr,
    hasn't been appreciated by the U.S. or Israel, not to mention Turkey's
    secular-minded military, which is determined to prevent Islamization
    of its country.

    The widely publicized death threats made by Muslims over the Danish
    cartoons and threatened execution of an Afghan Muslim convert to
    Christianity, along with the violence in Turkey's Kurdish region,
    have provided further fuel for those questioning the compatibility
    of a Muslim nation such as Turkey joining the EU.

    However, some see the turmoil in Turkey's Kurdish region as simply one
    aspect of a much broader situation involving the evolution of Turkish
    institutions toward authentic democracy and the Turkish government's
    commitment to guarantee fundamental human rights for all its citizens.

    Paradoxically, this transformation is taking place when growing
    numbers of Turks are questioning the value of joining the EU,
    convinced European nations are trying to impose their own western
    values on Turkey as the price of admission to the EU's exclusive club.

    The challenge for Mr. Erdogan is to convince his own countrymen and
    those of EU states that it is possible to be both a good Muslim and
    a defender of democratic principles at the same time.

    But the Kurds must be full partners in that transformation if it's
    to truly succeed.

    Harry Sterling, a former diplomat, is an Ottawa-based commentator. He
    served in Turkey.
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