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  • "Europe Needs Turkey"

    "EUROPE NEEDS TURKEY"

    Expatica, Netherlands
    Feb 20 2007

    AMSTERDAM - "In the long term Turkey not only needs Europe, but Europe
    needs Turkey. If we forget about Turkey, all hell will break loose,"
    says Geert Mak, journalist and non-fiction writer.

    Mak's most recent book De Brug (The Bridge), set in Istanbul, is being
    given away free at bookshops during this year's Book Week (14 -24
    March). Mak makes these comments in the booklet Boekenweek CV 2007,
    which appears in March and contains excerpts from Mak's work as well
    as a reader's quiz.

    Turkey's accession to the EU is on the agenda in the Netherlands once
    again because of Queen Beatrix's state visit to the country planned
    for next week.

    Mak writes in the booklet: "It is already of strategic importance
    that a bridge be built to the Middle East via Turkey. A modern Turkey
    will also function as a beacon of modernisation for the Islamic
    world within a few decades. If we let Turkey go, on the other hand,
    all hell will break loose. There is a good chance that the country
    will fall prey to fundamentalism and become an unguided missile in
    this sensitive region," Mak say.

    More than 40 representatives from the Dutch media have signed up
    to report on Beatrix's visit to Turkey. The country has featured
    prominently in the news over the past few months because of its
    prospective EU membership, dubious record when it comes to human
    rights and the (denial of the) Armenian genocide in 1915.

    It does not look as if these thorny issues will be broached during
    the state visit. "The visit should accentuate and strengthen the
    historically good relations between the two countries," says the
    Government Information Service.

    Turkey expert Professor Erik-Jan Zurcher said on Monday that the
    genocide is not a question that should be stirred up publicly, like
    Liberal VVD MP Hans van Baalen would like to do.

    "Intervention like that is not wise. In doing so you certainly don't
    help out the Turks who are willing to enter the debate. These people
    cannot afford to be labelled a mouthpiece for Europe." The debate
    on the genocide has been opened, Zurcher says, but by a 'small
    intellectual elite.'

    Zurcher says that in the meantime enthusiasm among Turks for entering
    the EU is waning. "For a whole generation at least 70 percent said
    'yes' to the EU, now it is only 50 percent in some opinion polls."

    Still Turkey cannot be expected to ever entirely abandon its hopes
    to join. "Europe serves as an example, they want to join, but they
    have some reservations. It is widely thought that Europe does not
    have the best intentions for Turkey, that it is also a force that
    could threaten unity."
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