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  • Turks vent nationalist anger, pride before poll

    Kuwait Times, Kuwait -
    July 11 2007


    Turks vent nationalist anger, pride before poll
    Published Date: July 11, 2007

    GALLIPOLI: The monuments and mass graves of Gallipoli record the
    horrors and heroism of war, but also help explain the nationalism
    that fires Turks and is shaping a parliamentary election campaign.
    British, French, Australian and other troops stormed the beaches of
    this windswept peninsula in 1915 to try to capture Istanbul, knock
    the Ottoman Turkish Empire out of World War One and open a sea route
    to their ally Russia. But they reckoned without the bravery of the
    Turks and their commander Mustafa Kemal, w
    ho said: "I am ordering you not to fight but to die". Nearly 400,000
    men, more than half of them Turks, were killed or wounded before the
    Turks prevailed.

    It was a triumph which prepared Turks psychologically for future
    battles in which they trounced powerful Western armies and went on to
    establish the modern Turkish Republic in 1923 under the leadership of
    Kemal, later known as Ataturk. "My father was just 14 when he fought
    here with Ataturk and was wounded. Our country was saved here, the
    republic really began here," said Ahmet Oktay, 78, a retired railway
    worker.

    We owe our present life to the sacrifices they made. If we had no
    nationalism, we would not have the life we enjoy today," he said at
    the monument commemorating the Ottoman Turkish casualties, a tranquil
    site overlooking the Dardanelles Straits. All political parties are
    pressing their nationalist credentials before the election on July
    22. The far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) is expected to be
    the third party in parliament, after the centre-right AK Party and
    the main opposition centre-left Rep
    ublican People's Party (CHP), which is also nationalist-minded. The
    MHP and CHP have criticized the ruling Islamist-rooted AK Party for
    selling off Turkish firms to foreign investors and favor a tough
    stance on the European Union in membership talks.

    Distrust, fear

    But there is a darker side to Turkish nationalism that one can also
    encounter at Gallipoli, even though the site commemorates both sides'
    dead. "Western countries have the same intentions as they had in
    World War One. They want to weaken and divide Turkey, they fear a
    strong Turkey will become the leader of the Muslim world," said
    Cuneyt Musuk, 34, a factory worker now living in Germany. This is not
    an uncommon view in NATO member Turkey, where fear of outsiders can
    erupt into violence. Ultra-nationalists
    were blamed for the recent murders of Turkish Armenian editor Hrant
    Dink and an Italian Catholic priest.

    They have thrived in a legal and political climate that makes it a
    crime to insult "Turkishness". People who question the official,
    nationalist version of Turkey's history, such as Nobel Literature
    Laureate Orhan Pamuk, have been prosecuted. The nationalist trend has
    prompted the AK Party, which is widely expected to be re-elected, to
    sound more hawkish. It has threatened to send troops into northern
    Iraq to crush Kurdish rebels and avoided discussions about the
    supranational, increasingly unpopular EU. "T
    here is much more nationalism in Turkey today because of the Iraq war
    and US policy in Iraq," said William Hale, a Turkey scholar at
    Istanbul's Sabanci University.

    Concerns of Kurdish state

    Turks fear US policy is leading inexorably to the creation of an
    independent Kurdish state in northern Iraq which could fan separatism
    among Kurds in southeastern Turkey. They are also angry the United
    States has not tackled some 4,000 Turkish Kurdish separatist rebels
    based in northern Iraq. Hale also attributed the upsurge in
    nationalism to Ankara's EU-linked reforms, which are often depicted
    by Turkish media as one-sided concessions to a Europe they say will
    never admit Turkey, a large, relatively poor,
    overwhelmingly Muslim country.

    The MHP is optimistic, unsurprisingly after a poll found more than
    half of Turks saw themselves as "very nationalistic". "We are
    climbing the ladder. People are angry because the AK Party is
    throwing into question our national identity, the foundations of the
    republic, our Turkishness," said Vural Oktay, an MHP candidate for
    the western port city of Izmir. Under electoral rules, if the MHP
    clears the 10 percent threshold to enter parliament, the AK Party
    could end up with a smaller majority. This could spe
    ll political instability, and some human rights activists fear a
    rollback of reforms. "The nationalism is often provoked by state
    officials, including in the army, who often do not grasp the
    volatility of the situation," said Orhan Kemal Cengiz of the Human
    Rights Agenda Association in Ankara. He fears clashes between Turks
    and Kurds in Turkish cities. Some members of Turkey's security forces
    are also known to sympathize with shadowy ultra-nationalist groups,
    often made up of disaffected young men looking
    for a cause. - Reuters
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