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  • 'We Turks want to be a part of Europe,but with our honour and values

    Links: 'We Turks want to be a part of Europe, but with our honour and values
    intact': People say they cannot continue to sacrifice their culture and feel
    insulted by hostile European attitudes

    The Guardian - United Kingdom
    Dec 18, 2004

    HELENA SMITH IN BEYPAZARI


    Since Ottoman times, the people of Beypazari have rarely had to stop
    their slow-motion lives to think of the world beyond the Anatolian
    slopes that surround them.

    But this quiet town, a showcase of social and economic progress which
    is anchored at the country's east-west crossroads, has been obsessed by
    the thought of Turkey achieving membership of the EU, and the arguments
    raging here yesterday were doubtless being echoed across the land.

    For some in the town, there is the giddy excitement that a 40-year
    wait to join the continent of Europe may be coming to an end; others,
    though, say this must not come at any price. And if they had one
    thing in common yesterday, it was irritation with the EU.

    Many said they felt unhappy at what they viewed as the EU's lack of
    regard for the country's culture and traditions.

    "They [Europeans] have been teasing us for 40 years. And now they're
    delaying our membership again. It really bothers us," said a local
    jeweller, Ismail Akbay. "We don't have to accept whatever the EU
    asks from us. That's just too many sacrifices. We should try and find
    a mid-point."

    Even worse, said Yakup Turkoglu, a restaurant owner, was the blatant
    discrimination of some EU states against the predominantly Muslim
    country. "Personally, I think our bond with the EU can only be
    economic. We can't be united politically or culturally because the
    EU has so many prejudices against us as Muslims."

    Huddled against the biting cold in a popular tavern, Peri Memis, a
    headscarved mother-of-two, agreed. "I'm really worried that Europe's
    going to ask us to change our traditions and bring up our children
    with cultural values that aren't our own," she said, clasping her
    daughter's hand. "They've already said we're not allowed to eat the
    intestines of sheep."

    But in Beypazari, at least, it is the perception of being "humiliated"
    by an EU allegedly bent on moving the goalposts that remains by far
    the biggest complaint. Why, many asked, should Turkey fulfil any more
    conditions if there was no guarantee of the country joining the union?

    "We Turks want to be part of Europe, but with our honour and values
    intact," said Irfan Solmaz, a factory worker. "The Europeans are
    humiliating us with so many conditions. We're afraid that as Muslims
    we'll be assimilated in this Christian club."

    Even Mansur Yavas, the mayor of the market town and an undiluted EU
    enthusiast, said he felt "hurt" by the attitudes of Europeans towards
    his country. All the talk about minority rights for Turkey's Kurdish
    and Armenian communities, he said, had rekindled suspicions that
    Europe's underlying intention was the break-up of the Turkish state.

    There were certain red lines that Turks couldn't cross. "Now they're
    asking us to say we discriminated against the Armenians when we never
    did any such thing," he said indignantly.

    "The conditions they're placing on us are becoming comical. Soon
    they'll be saying Turkish men should cut off their moustaches and
    change their hairstyles. All of these are double-standards that were
    never imposed on any other [EU] candidate."

    So far, under the leadership of the prime minister, Tayyip Erdogan,
    Ankara's Islamic-leaning government has skilfully contained mounting
    resentment towards the EU. Yesterday, Mr Yavas admitted that, like
    Turks elsewhere, many of his constituents' ambivalence over Europe
    was born of ignorance.

    But he added: "Every day they wake up to a new condition from the
    EU. The misconception that we'll have to change our culture is very
    much to blame on the confusion that has arisen as a result."

    Few places evoke as much admiration among Turks as Beypazari, and
    there is recognition here among business leaders of the advantages
    that EU membership could bring.

    Barely five years ago, the town was a jumble of decaying wooden houses,
    testimony to the poverty and unemployment that have marred Turkey's
    EU aspirations.

    Under Mr Yavas's entrepreneurial mayorship, buildings have been
    restored and the handicraft industry re-energised, triggering a
    tourism boom that few ever expected. Far from hiding in their homes,
    women now stride purposefully along the streets, selling their wares
    in gaily coloured shawls.

    "Beypazari proves how fast things can change in Turkey," said the
    mayor, seated behind a laptop computer in his spacious office.

    With the success has come optimism, highlighted by the dream of
    joining the EU. Locals hope that, soon, they will begin exporting
    rice and cotton as well as the town's famous carrots to the bloc.

    "We made the decision to look west with Ataturk [the soldier-statesman
    who founded the modern republic out of the crumbling Ottoman empire
    in 1923]," said Mr Yavas. "Turks have always wanted to have the same
    living standards as people in the west."

    www.byegm.gov.tr/on-sayfa/ab/ eu-np.htm Turkish government: EU
    programme

    www.deltur.cec.eu.int EU delegation to Turkey

    guardian.co.uk/turkey

    An EU flag flies in front of a mosque in the Turkish capital, Ankara
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