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Turkey's Democracy Under Microscope

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  • Turkey's Democracy Under Microscope

    TURKEY'S DEMOCRACY UNDER MICROSCOPE
    by Gareth Jones

    ArabianBusiness.com
    Jan 24 2008
    United Arab Emirates

    A police inquiry resulting in the arrest of dozens of people, including
    ex-army officers and lawyers, could test Turkey's democracy and its
    ability to fight ultra-nationalism as well as help its campaign to
    join the EU.

    Turkish authorities announced on Tuesday the detention of 33 people
    as part of an eight-month investigation into a cache of explosives
    and weapons seized in an Istanbul shanty town last year. The detained
    have not yet been charged.

    Newspapers and analysts say the investigation extends far beyond the
    weapons case and say the detainees are part of a shadowy "deep state",
    code for hardline nationalists in Turkey's security forces and state
    bureaucracy ready to take the law into their own hands for the sake
    of their ideological agenda.

    "The state takes on the deep state," read the headline of Wednesday's
    pro-government Sabah newspaper.

    The liberal Radikal daily said those arrested had tried to foster "the
    climate for a coup", hinting they had powerful backers in a secular
    military and bureaucratic elite that deeply distrusts Turkey's AK
    Party government and its EU reforms.

    Officials have confirmed the names of many of those detained but have
    so far declined to give details of the accusations against them. The
    detained include a retired colonel who heads a far-right group known
    for its elaborate oath-taking rituals.

    Prime minister Tayyip Erdogan and interior minister Besir Atalay were
    personally involved in the decision by Turkey's counter-terrorism
    unit to detain the suspects, newspapers said.

    "All democrats in Turkey have been looking forward to this sort
    of action by the government... Everybody is now hoping something
    will happen but people remain very suspicious," said Cengiz Aktar,
    a professor at Istanbul's Bahcesehir University.

    "This is a very important test for the government, they will be
    judged by this... If these people [are guilty and] are convicted,
    it will be very good for Turkish democracy as well as for our efforts
    to join the European Union."

    Several other criminal cases believed to involve the "deep state"
    have petered out due to a lack of political will, analysts say.

    The Milliyet daily quoted police sources as saying the suspects,
    members of an illegal gang known as "Ergenekon", had been plotting
    to kill prominent Kurdish politicians as well as Turkey's only Nobel
    Prize winner, the novelist Orhan Pamuk.

    Pamuk fell foul of nationalists after saying Turkey was responsible
    for the deaths of more than a million ethnic Armenians during World
    War One and of 30,000 Kurds in recent decades. Nationalists say such
    claims sully Turkey's honour.

    The Sabah daily said the "Ergenekon" network was behind the 2007
    slaying of Turkish Armenian editor Hrant Dink, the murder of an
    Italian Catholic priest in 2006, the killing of a judge in an attack
    on Turkey's top administrative court in 2006 and several bomb attacks
    on the left-leaning Cumhuriyet daily.

    There is no evidence of a link between these different incidents,
    though Turkish media have long speculated about possible "deep state"
    involvement in each of these cases.

    Several youths are now on trial over the Dink murder, which triggered
    mass protests in Istanbul against ultra-nationalism. Another youth
    has been jailed for the murder of the priest in his church in the
    Black Sea city of Trabzon.

    Among the detainees is Kemal Kerencsiz, a lawyer who brought cases
    against both Dink and Pamuk under article 301 of Turkey's penal code
    that makes it a crime to insult "Turkishness". Dink had received
    a suspended sentence under 301 before his murder while Pamuk was
    acquitted on a legal technicality.

    The government is expected to reform article 301 in the near future
    amid heavy pressure from the EU, which sees the law as a major
    impediment to freedom of expression.

    Turkey began EU membership talks in 2005, but negotiations have slowed
    sharply amid disputes over human rights and Cyprus.
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