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Prime Minister Admits Turkey's 'Fascist' Past

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  • Prime Minister Admits Turkey's 'Fascist' Past

    PRIME MINISTER ADMITS TURKEY'S 'FASCIST' PAST
    Thomas Seibert

    The National
    May 26 2009
    UAE

    ISTANBUL // Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has
    become his country's first head of government to acknowledge publicly
    that his country displayed a "fascist approach" in dealing with its
    minorities in the past, when Christians and Jews fled abroad after
    coming under pressure.

    "For years, these things were done in this country," Mr Erdogan
    told a meeting of his ruling Justice and Development Party in Duzce,
    north-western Turkey, last weekend.

    "People of other ethnicities were driven from the country. Did we win
    anything because of that? This was the result of a fascist approach."

    With this "historic self-criticism", as newspapers called it, the
    prime minister was reacting to opposition criticism aimed at government
    plans to consider giving the job of clearing landmines along the border
    with Syria to foreign - especially Israeli - companies. As relations
    between Turkey and Syria have improved rapidly in recent years,
    both countries have agreed to clear the mines on their border. The
    parliament in Ankara is expected to debate a bill designed to organise
    the mine-clearing operation along the border strip of almost 900km
    this week.

    The Erdogan government has been criticised repeatedly by opposition
    parties for opening Turkey to foreign investors. A law concerning
    the sale of real estate to foreigners has been stopped by the
    constitutional court several times in recent years after nationalists
    said the regulation would enable foreigners to take control over
    large parts of Turkey's territories.

    Members of Turkey's tiny non-Muslim minorities are regarded with
    suspicion by Turkish nationalists, who see them as agents of such
    foreign powers as Greece or Israel. Countering these accusations in
    his Duzce speech, Mr Erdogan said: "Money is like mercury. It goes
    where it finds the most adequate place." Referring to the opposition,
    he added: "You see, some come out and say: 'This Jewish investment
    is wrong.' No, this friend is coming to invest in my country. He is
    investing a billion dollars. There is no 'we don't want that'."

    In the mine-clearing debate, opposition parties accused the Erdogan
    government of selling out to foreigners because the company that wins
    the tender has the right to use the land for organic agriculture for
    44 years after the clearing operation.

    Opposition politicians said the government was about to hand over
    control of the border area to Israel because Israeli companies are
    reported to have come up with very competitive proposals.

    "The border is holy, it is a place where national honour is being
    protected," Erdal Sihapi, a member of parliament for the right-wing
    Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) said in a speech this month. "Now
    this honour is being given away to foreigners for 44 years."

    Observers say Mr Erdogan went far beyond the usual rhetoric of a
    Turkish politician when he answered the opposition's accusations -
    the kind of public self-criticism that is very unusual for Turkey.

    "That statement was the most courageous thing ever said by Erdogan",
    Halil Berktay, a historian at Istanbul's Sabanci University, told
    yesterday's Vatan newspaper. Baskin Oran, another academic known for
    his liberal views, told the Star newspaper he was "proud of a prime
    minister who denounces ethnic and religious cleansing".

    With his comments, Mr Erdogan touched a delicate subject in Turkey. In
    several waves over the past several decades, thousands of Greeks,
    Armenians and Jews have left the country after riots or after pressure
    from the state in the form of punitive taxes. In one incident,
    Turkish nationalists destroyed hundreds of shops owned by Greeks and
    Armenians in Istanbul in one night on Sept 6 1955. The subject was
    taboo in Turkey for a long time and has been discussed openly only
    for a few years.

    "The Greek community, which has been afraid to talk about the events of
    the 6th and the 7th September, will now talk without fear about their
    experiences after the prime minister's statement," Mihailis Vasiliadis,
    a journalist and member of Istanbul's Greek community, told the Star.

    The number of Greeks living in Istanbul has shrunk dramatically, to
    about 3,000 from nearly 100,000 at the end of the 1950s, according
    to Rev Dositheos Anagnostopoulos, a spokesman of the Greek-Orthodox
    Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople in Istanbul.

    "These are tragic figures that speak volumes," Anagnostopoulos said
    in an interview last month.

    "They went away because they did not see a future for themselves."

    Silvio Ovadio, leader of Turkey's Jewish community, also welcomed Mr
    Erdogan's speech. "Everybody, whatever his religion, is made happy
    by the prime minister's words," he told the Star. The number of Jews
    in Turkey, once around 60,000, has sunk to 20,000.

    Opposition politicians, however, accused Mr Erdogan of defacing
    Turkey's history. Onur Oymen, a leading member of the Republican
    People's Party, the biggest opposition party in parliament, said no
    Turkish citizen had ever been expelled because of his ethnicity, the
    NTV news channel reported. Mr Oymen also said his party will send the
    mine-clearing bill to the constitutional court if parliament adopts
    it, according to news reports.

    Oktay Vural of the MHP said Mr Erdogan's words were an insult to the
    Turkish nation.
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