Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Matters Of Protection

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Matters Of Protection

    MATTERS OF PROTECTION
    By Kristen Stevens

    Turkish Daily News
    Jan 24 2008
    Turkey

    In the year since Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink's murder stained
    this country's fabric, my husband and I welcomed our fair-skinned son,
    a Turkish citizen, into the world. Living in Turkey, I cannot deny
    that I am scared for his safety and his future.

    Since his birth, three Protestants were strangled after extensive
    torture in Malatya because of their faith and attempts were made on
    the lives of clergymen in several cities. So far authorities have
    shown nothing but disregard for the recent escalation in violent
    hatred here along ethnic, religious and nationalist lines. Soli Ozel,
    an international relations professor at Bilgi University, wrote in
    daily Sabah last week, "The political authority hasn't clamped down
    on the matter determinedly in any of these cases and hasn't openly
    declared that what was done was evil." Nor have they done anything
    to scrap Article 301 even as it continues to hinder free speech and
    condemn people like Dink to petty convictions that only serve to fuel
    nationalist hatred.Two days before the anniversary of a murder born
    of growing intolerance for minorities and free speech, Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdoðan set the public discourse over the flames of a
    different freedom: the right of women to wear Islamic head cover in
    school. He announced that his government would change the constitution
    to lift the ban on religious headscarves in public universities.

    Flawed mission

    The prime minister extols the virtues of one freedom of religion and
    not others, revealing a flaw in the government's mission. They want
    to sell the West on the idea that American-style freedom to worship
    (secularism) suits their own cause of upending one of the country's
    founding principles that limited the influence of religion on the
    state (laicism). If they were smart salesmen - or virtuous in their
    ideology - they would not choose one religion's exemption from the law
    over another's. By ignoring the trampled freedoms of religious and
    ethnic minorities to worship and express themselves, the government
    sets itself up to lose in the secular arena as well.

    But the real losers are members of the next generation who saw images
    of an ethnic Armenian Turkish journalist lying face down shot after
    being convicted of insulting Turkishness. Leaders must take measures
    to reassure kids that the same won't happen to them if they speak or
    write freely. In what might turn out to be a bold step in the right
    direction, Turkish authorities arrested 30 people on Tuesday suspected
    of a series of politically inspired killings and attacks.

    Among them is a well-known lawyer involved in court cases against
    Dink and Turkish Nobel prize winning author Orhan Pamuk, whose case
    is ongoing. Maureen Freely, a writer, journalist and translator of
    Pamuk's books who grew up in Istanbul, told me during an interview on
    Monday that the nationalist perspective could evolve into something
    more benign through conversation and inclusion. "For Turkey to truly
    prosper, people have to have room to maneuver," said Freely, who was
    in town to remember Dink.Meanwhile over the weekend a Turkish court
    blocked access to popular video sharing Web site YouTube for the second
    time this year. At fault was a video insulting Ataturk, founder of
    the republic. But nationalists posting death threats on Web sites are
    protected. I stood holding my baby son on Saturday as nationalists
    chanted insults when Dink's wife Rakel addressed the crowd where her
    husband was shot. Do they enjoy more freedoms than our children will?

    --Boundary_(ID_yJlLSJnttYZWG6WGm7sBlw)--
Working...
X