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  • Look Who's Talking: Turkey!

    Kurdish Aspect
    June 9 2010


    Look Who's Talking: Turkey!


    Huffington Post - By Hussain Abdul-HussainAlrai


    A country that has been occupying part of a neighbor state for
    decades, that often sends its air force to bomb anti-government
    militants, that refuses to give civil rights to its biggest minority
    and that twists arms of world governments in order to impose its
    version of history... well, you guessed it, it is Turkey.

    In 1974, Turkey invaded the northern part of Cyprus presumably to
    rescue Turkish Cypriots amid growing tensions with their compatriot
    Greek Cypriots. Since then, Turkey has maintained its occupation over
    Northern Cyprus that proclaimed its independence in 1983. Going
    against the will of the United Nations, Turkey was the only one to
    recognize Northern Cyprus, while the world stood in support of
    Nicosia's sovereignty over the occupied land. Turkish military
    bullying in the Middle East did not stop in 1974 as the Turkish army
    often launches punitive air and ground campaigns against Kurdish
    rebels in southern Turkey. Turkey's Kurds have long been deprived of
    their political, cultural and economic rights, often forced to
    relinquish the teaching of their language in their schools, and never
    allowed to create any political groups.

    The unlucky Kurds repeatedly revolted against Ankara. Some of them
    went as far as demanding autonomy or independence, thus inviting
    further brutality from the Turkish majority dominating the government.

    The rebellious Kurds formed armed groups and launched their own war of
    independence. In retribution, the Turkish army has repeatedly pursued
    them in the mountainous southeastern part of the country. Whenever
    squeezed, Kurdish militiamen take refuge in the predominantly Kurdish
    northern Iraq. In their footsteps, the Turkish army has - several
    times - crossed the border into Iraq. When it did not, like a week
    ago, it only shelled Kurdish positions on the border.

    Until a few years ago, Turkey had been preoccupied with its own
    affairs, whether in Cyprus or southeastern Turkey. But recently,
    Ankara has become an outspoken player in one of the world's toughest
    and most volatile regions. The Turkish government has taken sides and
    entered into alliances with rogue states such as Iran and Syria.

    Meanwhile, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has leveled criticism
    against Middle Eastern and world governments, sometimes accusing them
    of being unfair when dealing with Iran, at other times blaming this or
    that government for its domestic policies.

    But when it comes to civil liberties, look who's talking. True,
    Erdogan eased some restrictions on the Kurds as he recently allowed
    them to use their language in the broadcast of private satellite
    stations or in recording songs. However, until today, the Kurds were
    not allowed to give their children Kurdish names, or form political
    parties.

    It has long been known that a government repressive of Kurdish rights
    sits in Ankara. Despite the lifting of a few restrictions on the Kurds
    -- under pressure from the EU which Turkey aspires to join for
    economic benefits -- Erdogan and his cabinet pretend to be champions
    of human rights around the world.

    Bad blood has also long existed between Turkey and Armenia over what
    many Armenians believe to be Turkish mass killings of Armenians in the
    late nineteenth and early twentieth century.

    Since an influential community of Armenian stock lives in California,
    home state of Congressman and Chairperson of Foreign Relations
    Committee Howard Berman, the Armenians lobbied for the committee to
    approve a bill that describes the Turkish massacres as genocide.

    Erdogan and his cabinet went ballistic. They recalled their Ambassador
    to Washington, even though President Barak Obama's Whitehouse had
    remained silent on the issue. After some American cozying up, the
    Turks resent their ambassador.

    The genocide debacle between Washington and Ankara has a parallel in
    history that only a few might remember. When former President George
    Bush asked Turkey to open its Angerlik base for American troops
    preparing to launch Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003, Turkish
    parliament convened and voted against the American request. The
    Turkish government, a long time ally of the US and a NATO member,
    declined Washington's request on the grounds that it couldn't have
    possibly forced such a decision down the throats of the elected
    representatives of the people of Turkey.

    But when a Congressional committee voted on the Armenian Genocide, the
    Turks punished the US government for a bill that had only passed one
    stage of its long journey to become law.

    The Turkish arrogance continues.

    Erdogan recently canceled a trip to Buenos Aires after the Argentinean
    government had moved a bust of Turkey's founder Kamal Ataturk,
    formerly on display. He blamed the Armenian lobby and said that his
    move "suited Turkey's honor."

    Turkey should either practice what it preaches about world justice and
    civil rights, or it should stop its trip of arrogance and go back to
    minding its own business. With its new behavior, Turkey is not welcome
    back into regional and world politics.

    http://www.kurdishaspect.com/doc060910HA.html




    From: A. Papazian
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