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Turkish Elections; Kurdish Woes

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  • Turkish Elections; Kurdish Woes

    TURKISH ELECTIONS; KURDISH WOES
    By Kani Xulam, KurdishMedia

    Kurdish Aspect, CO
    http://www.kurdishaspect.com/doc072407KX.html
    Jul y 25 2007

    "I am in New York, but New York ain't in me," says Mary to the
    "Invisible Man", the protagonist of Ralph Ellison's novel of the
    same name. She was a Southerner who had moved to the North thinking
    that New York could perhaps free her of the unrelenting shadow of Jim
    Crow. Notwithstanding hours of keyboard efforts that pass as news and
    commentary about the upcoming "free and fair" elections in Turkey,
    they will be nothing of the sort. To be sure, voting has made it to
    the lands administered by the Turks, but the ruling circles in Ankara
    have stymied its results since the inception of the republic. This
    latest exercise, like the other exercises before it, will not bring
    forth anything new. Like Mary, Turkey is unable, so far, to overcome
    its legacy of authoritarianism. But unlike Mary, it will not have
    the honesty to proclaim, "the elections ain't in me."

    To do so would require the Turkish military, the self-appointed
    guardians of the state, to come to terms with the reality of the Kurds
    and Islamists. An estimated one third to one fourth of the country is
    Kurdish, and yet the military dictated constitution of the country
    has simply declared us, courtesy of the Article 66 of the Turkish
    constitution, Turks. (Imagine telling all the Palestinians in the West
    Bank: they are now Hebrew speaking Jews by way of a solution to the
    intractable Israeli-Arab conflict.) A vast majority of the population
    in Turkey is Muslim, but the Turkish armed forces go ballistic when
    their country is labeled Islamic. They love it whey they are called
    Europeans, but don't ask them, please, to act like Hans, Bridgette or
    Tommy. If they had a wish they would wish all Kurds called themselves
    Turks and all Muslim declared themselves atheists.

    But people, unless they are subjects of totalitarian systems,
    do not like it when someone out of the blue appoints himself,
    be it Ataturk, their prophet and declares the fantasies of his
    sick mind as a revelation for their future. That vision, to make
    Turkey a carbon copy of a European country, noble as it may sound,
    has produced schizophrenic individuals throughout the country. Woe to
    the person who has challenged it or found himself unable to conform to
    the prescribed orthodoxy. Mind numbing are the stories, as they are
    heartbreaking. They are well known in Turkey. They are a source of
    pride for the country's Taliban-like secularists. But they make the
    friends of the Turks, those of the Kurds and those religious freedom
    cringe every time they hit the news. This Sunday we will have more
    of the same.

    One thing is for certain: this dissident will not take part in these
    "free and fair" elections. Turkey doesn't take kindly to its critics
    and especially those who have made a profession of airing its dirty
    laundry. Inside Turkey, my kinds are silenced. Outside of it, we are
    trying hard to sound the alarm bells for liberty's distress. Unlike
    the rest of the world, where politics is often divided up between the
    traditional rightwing and leftwing parties, in Turkey, if a European
    style democracy were practiced, there would be three groupings: the
    military and their favorites; the Islamists; and the Kurds. But don't
    look for a European style election here. Something called 10 percent
    threshold has made sure the Kurds will not make it to the parliament
    as a party. The Islamists and the militarists will fight this one out.

    But the Kurds, numerous as we may be, are not the only ones subjected
    to the lawful and awful wrath of the Turkish state. We have had
    company lately, and it is no other than the most illustrious son of
    Turkey, Orhan Pamuk. The recipient of 2006 Nobel Prize in literature
    is now "almost" officially a persona non grata in the country. He
    has left Turkey, the newspapers note, for fear of his life. He goes
    home, on rare occasions --put down your coffee to read this one--
    unannounced. If you think this is sad, there is more. The president
    of the country, Ahmet Necdet Sezer, did not call him to congratulate
    him for the award. And can you guess what might have been the reason?

    He had said, "30,000 Kurds and 1 million Armenians were killed in
    these lands, and nobody but me dares to talk about it."

    With all due respect to the esteemed Turkish author, 30,000 Kurds
    spoke before he did for the right to be themselves, the Kurds. But
    "our" government, bewitched by the legacy of Ataturk, shamelessly
    calls even their buried corpses Turks. There were those who insisted
    that the world was flat too. Science finally, thank God, caught up
    with them; will truth ever do the same with the children of Ataturk?
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