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Turkey's Trouble With Minorities

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  • Turkey's Trouble With Minorities

    Washington Post, DC
    Jan 20 2007

    Turkey's Trouble With Minorities


    Ali Ettefagh - The murder of Hrant Dink in Istanbul by right-wing
    extremists may well shatter Turkey's chances of joining the European
    Union.

    The killing of the 53-year-old Armenian journalist and the publisher
    of a newspaper for the Armenian community merely intended to open
    honest discussion about what Winston Churchill called the first
    Holocaust of the 20th Century. In late 1970s, the civil war that
    ended in a coup was triggered by a very similar murder of a respected
    leftist journalist, Abdi Ipekci, by the rightwing "Gray Wolves"
    nationalists. Back in 2000, a highly visible Jewish industrialist and
    philanthropist was murdered in Istanbul but the matter was stifled as
    economic crises overshadowed the matter.

    Hran Dink (and 12 other Turkish journalists currently in prison) was
    convicted of insulting the ethnic fabric and the "Turkishness" of the
    nation, a criminal offence under section 301 of the Turkish Criminal
    Code. This is a highly subjective law in Turkey and a topic at the
    core of objections by the European Union which insists on fair
    treatment of ethnic minorities. The French parliament has demanded
    Turkey face its past conduct in respect to the systematic killings of
    Armenians back in 1915.

    Turkey is certainly in a tough fix: Its EU negotiations are frozen in
    their tracks. It has a number of prickly issues and disagreements to
    overcome with the EU including the issues of human rights,
    recognition of ethnic minorities and the resolution of its no-win
    position in Cyprus. Concurrently, it worries about the future of an
    Iraqi Kurdistan and its own Kurdish population, some one-third of its
    citizens. It has a young population base and close to 100% of its GDP
    in national debt. Its private sector continues to bet on a one-way
    road of entry into EU as it incurs higher levels of debt. With a
    civil war on its border, the Turkish government openly supports and
    arms the Turkomen minorities in Kirkuk. And it has other interests in
    Bosnia and hostile postures towards Armenia and Serbia.

    The sum of such components can further complicate issues in a region
    that is revisiting its religious and ethnic roots, dating back to the
    times of the Ottoman Empire and the pre-revolutionary Russia. Turkey
    must deal with these ghosts in a frank and transparent manner just as
    all other secular countries in Europe have done.
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