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  • ANKARA: Turkish Private Sector Friendship Association

    TURKISH PRIVATE SECTOR FRIENDSHIP ASSOCIATION
    Mithat Melen

    Turkish Daily News, Turkey
    Dec 24 2007

    The first time I visited Brussels was 43 years ago. My brief stay
    there lasted only three days. Later, in 1972 I landed at Brussels
    Airport for the second time at that unfortunate day when a group
    of Israeli sportsmen were killed by PLO militants during the Munich
    Olympic Games. The next day I started as a trainee at the European
    Commission. Afterwards I don't remember how many times I visited
    Brussels, but living there for six years one gathers many memoirs
    and makes several friends.

    Some days ago I received an invitation to be the keynote speaker
    at a conference the Turkish Private Sector Friendship Association
    (TOSED) was organizing. The people who issued the invitation were my
    old friends Tufan Onder and Vakur Daðdeviren, with whom I had shared
    a room at the Brussels University student dormitory. I accepted the
    invitation and here I am in Brussels.

    TOSED is a nongovernmental organization founded in 1998. It has
    125 members. At least once a month they invite an internationally
    prominent personality to be the keynote speaker of their conferences.

    Recently their guest speakers were 16 famous personalities, including
    Wilfried Marteens and Brigitte Grouvers. Most probably you know that
    Marteens is the prime minister and Grouvers a member of the council of
    ministers of Belgium. TOSED aims to arrange meetings between famous
    experts and Turkish business people living in Belgium. The topic of
    my presentation was "Turkey, globalization, economy, politics and
    the European Union." Two-and-a-half hours passed most pleasantly.

    I was happy to learn that several friends from my youth today had
    become prominent business people and high level executives. Secondly,
    the active participation of my young audience and their questions
    gave me a sense of well-being. Some of the names I can remember are
    Serdar Bilgic, Fikriye Guzel, Kader Sevinc, Can Kural, Yaþar Tumbaþ,
    Uður Þeker.

    These NGOs are important both for Turkey and the country they are
    established. Although Turkey has been late in involving itself with
    civil society groups, I can say beter late than never. Turks living
    abroad are concerned about the state of the Turkish economy. They
    find us somehow pessimistic. They don't want an estrangement of Turkey
    from the EU. Like some Europeans, some among my Turkish friends were
    focused on the lifting of Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code. I
    had to explain to them the truth and the realities of Turkey.

    Terrorism in Turkey and the position German and French leaders have
    adopted against my country is creating reaction from the ordinary
    Turk against the EU. I told my audience that the important issue for
    Turkey today is to create more Turkish business owners in Europe and
    reminded them that Armenian, Israeli, Greek and Greek Cypriot lobbies
    were being fed by big capital around the world.

    Changing roles

    In the near future, most probably France and Germany will stop being
    the locomotives of the EU because of the problems they will face in
    employment and the competition coming from the Far East. At this
    point Turks living in Europe have to fill this void by creating a
    new dynamism in Europe.

    With Vakur and Tufan we nostalgically remembered those good old
    days. The student restaurant of our university days 35 years ago now
    is the famous Tizi Ouzou. As spon as we enter the plush interior the
    owner, Yahya, greets us.

    We cannot believe our own eyes. He has lost 45 kilos. "I have been ill
    these last seven months," he says. Apparently he has lung problems. We
    remember the old days. Rue de Moscou where Tizi Ouzou is situated is
    filled with Arabic eating places, including couscous restaurants. There
    are queues in front of them. Once a student neighborhood, St. Gilles
    today has become a high society quarter.

    The "F.C. Istanbul 76" football club which was founded in 1976
    honors me with a 30th year plaque. I meet several friends there. We
    have extensive discussions. Club executives remind me of something I
    had said thirty years ago. "Thirty years later if I return here and
    discover that the club and you are still there I will be very happy."

    The club's headquarters is in the Scharbeek district. We have to
    increase the number of similar sports clubs here.

    Belgium is undergoing serious economic problems. The population has
    aged, productivity has decreased. China is the big competitor. Even
    Turkish businessmen here are doing trade with China. They don't want
    to invest in Belgium because of the strict financial regulations. On
    the other hand the euro creates big headaches for Belgium. It has
    become an expensive country. But it is still livable.

    I go to the apartment flat in the Foret district where we had
    lived from 1977 to1980. As everything else in Brussels, nothing has
    changed. There is a flat to rent in the same apartment building.

    Tufan says the price is 900 euros a month, very sensible compared
    to a similar apartment flat iin Istanbul next to mine which goes for
    1000 euros a month. Approximate monthly wage in Belgium is 5000 euros.

    Compared to Istanbul, Brussels seems less expensive. But comparing
    Brussels to Istanbul in every other aspect, "How could I live here
    for such a long time?" I ask myself. Being the capital of Europe
    and a per capita income of 25,000 euros is very important. But the
    political problems take their root from the economic problems. The
    king of Belgium is recurrently calling on the people for reunification.

    If there wouldn't be the problem of examinations it would be so nice
    being a student in Brussels again.

    --Boundary_(ID_OmSVgW4Y8u7fLjWMRD7gfg)--
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