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Ethnic Tensions In Turkey Continuing To Escalate

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  • Ethnic Tensions In Turkey Continuing To Escalate

    ETHNIC TENSIONS IN TURKEY CONTINUING TO ESCALATE
    By Gareth Jenkins

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Oct 29 2007

    Over a week after the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) killed 12
    Turkish soldiers when they overran a military outpost in Daglaci,
    close to Turkey's border with Iraq, (see EDM, October 22), nationalist
    anger inside Turkey not only shows no sign of abating but appears
    to be becoming ever more aggressive. Unless some way can be found to
    defuse the tensions, there is now a real danger of ethnic clashes and
    racist violence. Turkey is no stranger to ethnic violence, pogroms,
    and racist killings. In January 2007, Turkish-Armenian Hrant Dink
    was shot dead in a racist attack. In April 2007 three Christians
    in the southeastern city of Malatya had their throats cut. However,
    violence has traditionally been directed against religious rather than
    ethnic minorities. But in recent years a combination of granting -
    mainly as the result of pressure from the EU -- greater cultural
    rights to Turkey's Kurdish minority and the continuing violence of
    the PKK has resulted in a discernible increase in racism against
    Kurds. Such sentiments have, in turn, been exacerbated by the Kurds'
    greater self-confidence. Twenty years ago Turkey's Kurds did not
    officially exist and even speaking Kurdish risked arrest. Today,
    not only can Kurds openly express their ethnic identity but, as a
    result of mass migration from the impoverished predominantly Kurdish
    provinces of southeast Turkey to the metropolises in the west of
    the country, it is now commonplace to hear Kurdish being spoken on
    the streets of Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, and Antalya. The result for
    Turkish nationalists has been an increasing siege mentality. For
    the Turkish middle-classes, ethnic prejudices have been compounded
    by social snobbery, as the Kurdish they hear tends to be spoken by
    manual laborers working on the roads and construction sites. For lower
    income groups, who have yet to derive any real benefit from the recent
    impressive growth in Turkey's gross national product, the Kurds are a
    convenient scapegoat for their own poverty. Since the recent upsurge
    in PKK attacks, which have killed nearly more than 40 members of the
    security forces in less than a month, Turkish nationalist anger has
    begun to be directed not just against the PKK but also against Kurds
    in general. Although several Turkish newspapers published details of
    attacks by nationalist mobs on Kurdish-owned businesses in Bursa on
    October 22 (see EDM, October 23), an article in the liberal daily
    Radikal suggests that in recent weeks such racist attacks have not
    only become much more widespread but are going largely unreported in
    the Turkish media (Radikal, October 28). Government spokesman Cemil
    Cicek issued a statement calling on Turks to prevent their grief
    and anger at the deaths of Turkish soldiers from becoming violent,
    even explicitly reminding them of past pogroms against Christians and
    members of the heterodox Alevi community (NTV, CNNTurk, October 29).

    General Yasar Buyukanit, the chief of the Turkish General Staff,
    has also called for restraint. However, in an official statement
    issued on October 28 in advance of the celebration of Republic Day on
    October 29, which is the official anniversary of the founding of the
    Turkish Republic in 1923, Buyukanit promised: "We shall make those
    who have caused us suffering to suffer even more" (Sabah, Vatan,
    Milliyet, Hurriyet, October 29). Although it was undoubtedly not his
    intention, there are many in Turkey who will have interpreted his
    words as being directed not just against the PKK but also against
    Kurds in general. Expectations that the demonstrations and protest
    marches that followed the October 21 attack would gradually decline
    have proved unfounded. On October 27 hundreds of thousands of Turks
    staged anti-PKK demonstrations across the country, including an
    estimated 300,000 in the central Anatolian city of Kayseri (Radikal,
    Milliyet, Vatan, October 28). On October 28, the annual Eurasian
    Marathon in Istanbul turned into a nationalist rally as thousands of
    runners carried Turkish flags and chanted anti-PKK slogans (Vatan,
    Hurriyet, Sabah, October 29). At times the mood has become almost
    hysterical. During an anti-PKK rally in the Mediterranean resort of
    Bodrum, one of the protestors turned up with his dog, both of which
    were wearing tee shirts with "Turk" written on them. The protestor's
    intention appears to have been to affirm his dog's nationalist
    credentials. But after a furious reaction from the Turkish press,
    the local governor has ordered the man's arrest and prosecution on
    charges of insulting the Turkish nation by suggesting that it was
    a dog (Vatan, October 29). Many Kurds have been so alarmed by the
    possibility of becoming victims of ultranationalist violence that
    they have hung Turkish flags from their homes and workplaces (Radikal,
    October 28). However, hard-line supporters of the PKK are refusing to
    be cowed. On the evening of October 28, 60-100 PKK supporters clashed
    with police in the Sisli neighborhood of Istanbul (NTV, CNNTurk,
    October 29). Although the demonstration was relatively small, there
    are concerns that, if and when Turkey launches a cross-border military
    operation into northern Iraq, PKK supporters in cities inside Turkey
    will attempt to stage violent protests that could, in turn, trigger
    an even more violent Turkish nationalist response.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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