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ANKARA: Repercussions Of Remarks By Defense Minister On The 'Nation-

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  • ANKARA: Repercussions Of Remarks By Defense Minister On The 'Nation-

    REPERCUSSIONS OF REMARKS BY DEFENSE MINISTER ON THE 'NATION-STATE'

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 13 2008
    Turkey

    First Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on various occasions
    that those who do not like Turkey's "one nation, one flag" structure
    can leave and go anywhere they like better.

    Defense Minister Vecdi Gönul took this threatening discourse to new
    heights on Monday with a speech he gave at the Turkish Embassy in
    Brussels. "Would we be the nation-state we are today if the Greeks in
    the Aegean region or the Armenians here and there continued to stay
    in Turkey?" he asked. Gönul drew harsh criticism from intellectuals
    and civil society organizations for expressing ideas in a way that
    could be taken for justifying ethnic cleansing.

    Ali Bayramoglu of Yeni Å~^afak criticizes Gönul for implying
    that the nation-state [of Turkey] managed to exist by deporting
    Armenians, Greeks and other minorities. "This is an unacceptable
    discourse. Gönul's remarks remind me of one of my previous interviews
    with a [Turkish] Ä°stanbulite. He said Ä°stanbul had a population of
    around 1 million in 1955. 'A considerable number of this population
    comprised minority groups. They acted as if they were the real owners
    of the city. They were not sympathetic. At every opportunity they
    made you feel they were different,' the man told me. Now I see that
    this mindset [to see minorities as an enemy] is still alive. This
    is the mindset that tore us and Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armanian
    journalist who was shot dead by an ultranationalist Turk in 2007,
    apart. This mindset carries the sorrow of the Sept. 6-7 incidents [a
    state-sponsored campaign designed to intimidate Turkey's non-Turkish
    communities into leaving their homeland to clear the way for a
    homogeneous Turkish state] to our day. The fact that this mindset
    has grabbed the opportunity to be represented by a prominent figure
    of the ruling party is a misfortune for all of us," Bayramoglu states.

    Star's Eser KarakaÅ~_ says he is surprised to see that a defense
    minister who did not utter a single word on the Oct. 3 Aktutun
    terrorist attack that left many Turkish soldiers dead and who
    does not brief the nation on issues directly related to national
    defense has now delivered a speech on nation building. "He says:
    'Before the foundation of the republic, there were four districts in
    Ankara, where Jews, Armenians, Greeks and Turks lived. Minorities
    owned the fertile lands in the Aegean region. The most important
    step in building this nation was the population exchange. Mind you,
    would we be such a nation-state if the Greeks in the Aegean region or
    Armenians here and there [in Turkey] continued to stay?' Everything
    he said was politically and legally scandalous," remarks KarakaÅ~_,
    adding that Gönul violated the Constitution and committed a crime
    with these remarks. "According to Article 66 of the Constitution,
    Armenians [who number around 70,000] and Greeks [who number around
    3,000] live in Turkey as our citizens. Gönul made a blunder by
    considering these citizens a 'threat to the nation-state.' This is
    a crime according to the Constitution. The defense minister should
    either resign or be removed from office. He should, furthermore,
    be tried in accordance with Article 216 of the Turkish Penal Code
    [TCK] since he declared Armenians and Greeks, who are our citizens,
    non-national elements. This absurdity cannot have anything to do with
    freedom of expression," KarakaÅ~_ concludes.

    --Boundary_(ID_cXx2W0oVI47/BSY7I7r9Uw) --
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