Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: How About Turkey's Rosa Parks?

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

  • ANKARA: How About Turkey's Rosa Parks?

    HOW ABOUT TURKEY'S ROSA PARKS?
    By Ali H. Aslan

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 25 2008
    Turkey

    When Ambassador Dan Fried, the assistant US secretary of state
    for European and Eurasian affairs, was testifying before a House
    subcommittee on March 15, 2007, he had said, "We welcome Turkish
    leaders and opinion makers' calls to amend or repeal Article 301."

    Would he also publicly side with Turkish leaders and opinion makers
    who call for lifting the notorious headscarf ban in Turkey? I strongly
    doubt it.

    It is good that the US administration feels relatively more
    comfortable in criticizing Article 301, which makes it a crime
    to insult "Turkishness." Thanks to a broad interpretation by some
    ultra-nationalist lawyers and prosecutors, the law has effectively
    been used as a tormenting tool against some of the countries finest
    minds, including Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk and assassinated
    Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink. I'm sure the US government
    would be happy if the country it wants to see become a future EU
    member leaves behind such laws and practices.

    In the meantime, one cannot help but ask whether the US has a clear
    position on the decades-old headscarf ban, especially in universities,
    which have been turning away some of the country's finest female
    minds. Same nationalist anti-reform circles in civil society and the
    state establishment are leading the persecution of these women. Yet we
    have not observed a principled approach on the matter from successive
    US administrations. True, they always mention the debate in their
    annual human rights and religious freedom reports, but they never
    take sides.

    Let alone criticizing the headscarf ban, throughout my more than
    10-year journalistic career in Washington, I have never heard a
    US official publicly say the headscarf ban (at least the one at
    universities) in Turkey is a "human rights violation." And that
    includes those who specialize in human rights and democracy.

    The last time I asked this question to a US official was when I
    interviewed Fried on July 3, 2006. (I didn't know back then that
    Fried's notion of democracy promotion in Turkey would not go further
    than saying the US doesn't take sides when the Turkish military issued
    a coup threat in April 2007). Fried replied, "I certainly don't want
    to express an opinion about this debate in Turkey, except to say that
    this is -- like in Turkey as in France -- part of a normal debate of
    a normal democratic society."

    Obviously, this was not Fried's personal position, because US officials
    are under strict guidance on what to say or not to say publicly. One
    of the most far-reaching comments I've heard on the headscarf problem
    from a US official came from Ambassador-at-Large for International
    Religious Freedom John Hanford on Sept. 1, 2004.

    Hanford spoke of the "controversial" headscarf issue in "certain
    countries" of the world, France in particular. He went on to say: "And
    we have spoken out on this and said we believe that Muslims, as long
    as they have peaceful intentions and are simply acting on the dictates
    of their conscience and are not doing so under provocation and are
    not provoking others, why shouldn't they be allowed to wear this? Why
    shouldn't Sikhs be allowed to wear turbans? This is the standard of
    religious freedom that we seek to promote around the world."

    It was good to hear that. But the US government's history of talking
    about and pursuing that "standard" in Turkey is an embarrassing one.

    US policy toward Turkey is mainly formulated by Fried's office, not
    Hanford. Although Fried once depicted the headscarf law in France as
    "controversial" (Senate testimony on April 5, 2006), one cannot imagine
    him stating that the headscarf ban in Turkey is also "controversial."

    The US State Department notes, "Because the promotion of human rights
    is an important national interest, the United States seeks to hold
    governments accountable to their obligations under universal human
    rights norms and international human rights instruments." Do they
    honor their principle on the headscarf issue? Not that I know of.

    Most people in charge of American policy on Turkey might sincerely
    think by using the previous approach they are protecting overall US
    national interests. They refrain from intimidating the oppressive
    civilian and bureaucratic elite and the social base that the latter
    represents. Although these people have lost ground lately to the
    ongoing silent revolution of the conservative middle class, they
    still enjoy a lot of influence. On the other hand, American rhetoric
    on non-Turkish minority rights and restrictive laws like Article 301
    also intimidates them. Why, then, do they keep so silent on headscarf
    issue? Is it because this is the most emotionally charged domestic
    debate in Turkey? Or is there also an Islamophobic element in US
    government thinking? I frankly can't tell.

    Not taking sides at times of clear violations of democratic and human
    rights principles is actually equivalent to taking sides with the
    oppressors. Being indifferent to Turkey's Rosa Parks incidents is not
    only un-American but also detrimental to long-term American interests,
    especially if the US is really serious about promoting women's rights
    worldwide and supporting further integration of Muslims with global
    society through modern, higher education.
Working...
X