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ANKARA: Turkey's 'Other War'

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  • ANKARA: Turkey's 'Other War'

    TURKEY'S 'OTHER WAR'
    Bulent Kenes

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Dec 10 2007

    We have been talking only about Turkey's counterterrorism fight in the
    recent months. Neither the attacks of the Kurdistan Workers' Party
    (PKK) nor the struggle against the terrorist organization ceases to
    be in the spotlight. Also never out of the spotlight are the slain
    PKK members and our security officers we lose to our fight against
    the PKK. For months we have been living with cross-border operation
    scenarios triggered by the PKK terror. We have people saying, "If
    it is the homeland in question, all the rest is but detail." What I
    want to talk about is this "detail" part. After reading my article,
    you decide whether it is really an unnecessary detail or a real war
    Turkey has to wage on terrorism.

    Above all, reducing the struggle of a country like Turkey merely to
    a counterterrorism struggle would be the greatest of mistakes. We
    should also scrutinize the socioeconomic conditions that facilitate
    the terrorists' jobs and look for remedies. Ultimately, fighting
    terrorism is not possible only with an armed struggle, and we should
    know that what threatens Turkey is not only terrorism, because the
    "other war" Turkey has to fight is maybe more important than its war
    against terrorism. It should also be known that Turkey will have more
    successful results in its security-oriented wars in the event it wins
    its other war against poverty, destitution and employment.

    You must have read the news article about the minimum wage in Turkey,
    covered on the front page of Sunday's Zaman. If you haven't, you must
    definitely read it to understand where Turkey's essential problems
    stem from. The article explains with striking examples how the minimum
    wage of 3 million people in Turkey is far from providing for even
    the lowest standard of living, revealing the minimum wage reality
    that concerns our 13 million citizens with all its ramifications. It
    clearly emphasizes that Turkey's "other war" is definitely not an
    unnecessary detail.

    Today an employee being paid minimum wage makes YTL 419 (or $358) a
    month. Millions of people who earn this amount live in large families
    of four, six or more and have to set aside most of this amount for
    the rent of their slum houses that are devoid even of the most basic
    human requirements. According to Confederation of Turkish Labor Unions
    (TURK-ÝÞ) reports, a family of four needs YTL 697 monthly just to
    buy food and YTL 2,200 monthly to cover mandatory expenses like food,
    rent, transportation, health and education. That is, a person paid the
    minimum monthly wage has no means of providing for his family's food,
    clothing, education or health needs.

    Despite the 134 percent rise in their wages in the last five years
    and although this pay rise is much higher than the 59 percent rate of
    inflation increase, it doesn't make much difference in their struggle
    to survive in the utmost of poverty. The minimum wage's having risen
    above the rate of inflation doesn't give much consolation, either, as
    it is so low that it seriously hurts human dignity. In fact experts
    state that the people in Turkey who benefited the least from 43
    percent in growth in the Turkish economy in the last five years are
    minimum wage earners.

    If the inflation rate and the rate of the economic growth were to
    be applied to the minimum wage increase, the amount in question
    would have to be YTL 640 ($548). But the government is planning for
    the minimum wage raise to be between 6 and 8 percent. This small
    raise draws criticism even from employers hard put to keep up with
    international competition. The strange thing is that when you look at
    it from the perspective of employers, it doesn't seem quite possible
    to say that they are not right. The biggest responsibility here falls
    on the government because the government can at least forego insurance
    premiums and taxes on minimum wage earners.

    Maybe it will strike you as paradoxical, but the minimum wager earners
    -- who live below the hunger level, to say nothing of the poverty
    level - perhaps make up the relatively fortunate segment of Turkey
    because the ratio of unemployed to the general population is nearly 10
    percent. A total of 376,000 university graduates are looking for a job
    today. The number in question is estimated to rise by 86,000 this year.

    Although it is the 17th largest economy in the world, Turkey's
    ranking of 84th among 177 countries in the 2007-2008 United Nations
    Development Program (UNDP) Human Development Report (HDR) explains
    everything. Having risen to 84th place from 92nd in the "index"
    in the last five to six years through its economic performance,
    in the area of "human development" Turkey lags behind even Armenia,
    which attracts attention with its poverty level. Also, Turkey ranks
    last in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
    (OECD) region with regard to the human development index.

    In brief, Turkey's "other war" forms the mother of all wars, let
    alone being an unnecessary detail. Turkey still has a long distance
    to cover on this issue.

    --Boundary_(ID_lzDixOqKCz3RiBG+Xf66TA)--
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