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ANKARA: Candidates from minority groups too few to improve democracy

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  • ANKARA: Candidates from minority groups too few to improve democracy

    Today's Zaman , Turkey
    March 8 2009


    Candidates from minority groups too few to improve democracy


    Turkey's prominent political parties wish to garner the votes of
    minority groups in the March 29 municipal elections with their
    candidates from minority groups, which observers believe to be too few
    in number to draw these votes.

    Voters will select more than 200,000 new mayors and hundreds of
    provincial and local administrators on March 29, a day that will be a
    turning point in Turkish politics. There is fierce competition among
    political parties for the elections and many parties have already
    played their trump cards, among which are candidates from different
    ethnic and religious backgrounds.

    Observers, however, believe the number of minority candidates is too
    few to attract minority groups.

    `Unfortunately, we have become a society that places ideas above such
    notions as race, religion or sect. This deficiency makes itself felt
    in a number of fields, including politics. Political parties prefer to
    cluster around religion or race rather than around ideologies, ideas
    or thoughts,' stated Mehmet Altan, a columnist for the Star daily.

    Altan said the very limited number of people from different ethnic and
    religious backgrounds named as candidates in the approaching local
    elections would contribute very little to the improvement of Turkish
    democracy.

    The only candidate with Jewish roots to run in the municipal elections
    is Yusuf Bahar, the Democrat Party's (DP) candidate for mayor in
    Ä°stanbul's Adalar district.

    Bahar said he has never faced any trouble in Turkey for being Jewish,
    adding that individuals should not be categorized by their ethnic or
    religious backgrounds. `I believe people need to see everyone as
    citizens of the Republic of Turkey, and not as someone of Jewish
    origin or Armenian origin. My Jewish roots have never been a problem
    for me either in my private or professional life,' he noted.

    Additionally, a citizen with Armenian roots has made her way onto the
    ballot for the municipality council as the Nationalist Movement
    Party's (MHP) candidate for mayor in Ä°stanbul's
    BakırkÃ&#xB6 ;y district.

    Haco KeleÅ? said he received a proposal from the MHP's candidate
    for Bakırköy mayor, Esra Bicik, to be included on the
    list for municipality council. `I accepted the proposal thinking it
    would be a good move to assume the duty of establishing dialogue
    between the cultures,' he said.

    KeleÅ? maintained that citizens living in Turkey with different
    backgrounds don't see themselves as minorities, adding: `We, as people
    having lived in this country for several centuries, see ourselves as
    citizens of the Republic of Turkey. We promise that we will contribute
    solutions to problems.'

    Bicik said it was the right of minority groups in the country to be
    represented in the elections. `Our stance regarding minorities is well
    known. The MHP believes everyone living within the borders of the
    Republic of Turkey should be able to benefit from equal rights
    regardless of their languages, religions or races,' she added.

    Better known for its nationalist line, the MHP also named candidates
    with Kurdish and Arab backgrounds for the March 29 polls. Among these
    are Mehmet Ã-zyavuz, the candidate for mayor in southeastern
    Å?anlıurfa's Harran district, and Mustafa
    SaÄ?ır, the candidate for mayor in
    Å?anlıurfa's Akçakale district. Both Ã-zyavuz
    and SaÄ?ır have Arab roots. Among the MHP's Kurdish
    candidates is Ã-mer Ã-zalp, the party's candidate for mayor in
    Å?anlıurfa's Halfeti district.

    The MHP is known to have turned its back on the Kurdish problem in the
    country for many years, and its naming of Kurdish candidates in the
    approaching municipal elections has begged the question of whether it
    hopes to win back the hearts of the Kurdish population ahead of the
    elections in order to garner their votes.

    Turkey's Kurdish question has existed since the founding of the
    Turkish Republic but has turned violent in the last 25 years, with the
    Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) launching an armed campaign for
    autonomy against Turkish civilians and security forces in Turkey's
    Kurdish-populated Southeast.

    Similar moves to those of the MHP have come from the ruling Justice
    and Development Party (AK Party) and main opposition Republican
    People's Party (CHP), which named Alevi candidates in the upcoming
    polls.

    The Alevi community in Turkey is a religious group that differs from
    Sunni Islam and is thought to have between six and 12 million
    adherents. The Alevis have complained on various occasions about being
    subjected to discrimination and deprived of their cultural and
    religious rights.

    Mümtaz'er Türköne, a professor of political
    science, said the representation of minority groups in the elections
    would help improve democracy in Turkey, though he notes that there are
    very few candidates representing these groups in the approaching
    polls.

    `When it comes to the reason why there are very few candidates
    representing minority groups, I don't think it is discrimination
    against them. What I have observed until now is our citizens belonging
    to various minority groups that do not wish to engage in politics for
    a number of reasons. They are either not interested in politics or do
    not wish to expose their identities in society. They refrain from
    politics for such reasons,' he said.

    Contrary to the general opinion, Türköne added that
    there are probably more candidates representing religious minorities
    in the elections. `It is not that easy to make a distinction between a
    Sunni and an Alevi. There may be several Alevi candidates on the
    parties' lists who refuse to expose their Alevi identities. This is
    all caused by fear that they may be subjected to some sort of
    discrimination when people learn about their actual backgrounds,' he
    remarked.


    08 March 2009, Sunday
    BETÃ`L AKKAYA DEMÄ°RBAÅ? Ä°STANBUL
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