Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey Hands Its Enemies An Own Goal

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey Hands Its Enemies An Own Goal

    TURKEY HANDS ITS ENEMIES AN OWN GOAL
    Maureen Freely

    The Independent - United Kingdom; Aug 31, 2005

    Turkey was never going to have an easy ride into Europe. There was
    the question of Cyprus, and the question of the Kurds. Turkey's
    checkered human rights record was a cause for concern, as was the
    role the military played until very recently. There were also dark
    mutterings about the Islamicization of Europe.

    But the ghost at the feast has always been the question of the
    Armenian massacres in 1915. Europe would like to see Turkey recognise
    its responsibility and apologise. Turkey continues to maintain that
    " while several hundred thousand Armenians may have perished " this
    happened in the context of parallel massacres perpetrated against
    Muslim Turks.

    In certain parts of the Turkish intelligentsia, however, there is
    growing recognition that Turkey will not be successful in its European
    bid until this issue is aired in an open way and somehow resolved.

    It was in this spirit that Orhan Pamuk, Turkey's most famous novelist,
    said, in an interview last winter with the Swiss newspaper Tages
    Anzeiger that '30,000 Kurds and one million Armenians were killed in
    these lands and nobody but me dares to talk about it'. His comments,
    reprinted in the Turkish press the following day, caused a furore,
    with leading commentators denouncing him as a traitor.

    There followed death threats, ostensibly from offended members of
    the public, probably linked to right-wing paramilitaries. Fearing
    for his safety, Pamuk's friends advised him to leave the country. In
    his absence, the story ran and ran, with the Turkish press seizing
    on every comment from abroad to paint him as a Turk who shames his
    country abroad.

    As his friend and translator, I would like to make it very clear
    (here and in the Turkish newspapers where this piece will no doubt
    appear tomorrow) that this image is wholly false. This is a man who
    loves his country deeply, defends it fiercely, especially when abroad,
    and who cannot imagine living anywhere else.

    Pamuk is not the only Turkish intellectual to have brought the Armenian
    question into the public domain in recent months. Last May, a group
    of Turkish academics " some from Turkish universities, some based
    in the US and Europe " tried to hold a conference on the subject at
    Bogazici University in Istanbul.

    Entitled 'The Ottoman Armenians during the Era of Ottoman Decline',
    its aim was 'to understand and recount a historical issue that
    ... has become trapped and increasingly politicised between the
    radical Armenian national and official Turkish theses'. There was
    also a recognition amongst the (largely pro-EU) participants that
    if Turkish academics were able to find a space in which to 'own' the
    issue, this would in itself be proof to the European community that
    Turkey was a maturing democracy, intent on promoting and protecting
    freedom of thought.

    Sadly, the Justice Minister, Cemil Cicek, saw fit to indicate otherwise
    in the National Assembly the day before the conference was due to
    open. When an opposition deputy denounced the organisers as traitors,
    he rose to concur, going on to call the conference a 'dagger in the
    back of the Turkish people'.

    The conference was postponed. Many of those who were to have given
    papers vented their anger in the press, and though they were roundly
    condemned by very angry others there were those who saw this fiery
    exchange as proof that matters previously viewed as untouchable were
    at least getting a public airing.

    The optimists were vindicated when the conference was rescheduled for
    late September, and they were further encouraged when Prime Minister
    Tayyip Erdogan told the organisers that he supported the conference and
    wanted it to take place before his own talks with the EU on 3 October.

    But now this same government seems to have decided to shoot itself
    in the foot. For a public prosecutor has brought a case against Orhan
    Pamuk, having found his remarks in the Swiss newspaper last winter to
    be an infringement of Article 301/1 of the Turkish Penal Code. This
    states that 'the public denigration of Turkish identity' is a crime
    and recommends that those found guilty be given prison sentences of
    six to 36 months.

    Because another law prohibits Pamuk from commenting on his case
    while it is pending, the statement that his Turkish publishers will
    be sending out today is a three-sentence affair which sets out the
    facts and offers no opinion. It is up to us to decide how to read it.

    There is no doubt that it will raise questions about the wisdom of
    Turkey's EU membership bid. How can it possibly claim to be a European
    country if it has such laws on the books, and if public prosecutors
    can bring such cases? No doubt the censure has already started behind
    closed doors. No doubt it will be followed by more public denigration
    of Turkishness in the European press.

    This does not preclude a fairy-tale ending: common sense could
    prevail. The government could persuade the public prosecutor to drop
    his case. It could then put its full weight behind the conference,
    and signal to the right- wing paramilitaries to stay away.

    If the government fails to achieve any of the above, it may well be
    because it can't. Since December of last year, there has been a slow
    but steady rise of nationalist, anti-EU sentiment inside the ruling
    party, an even more dramatic rise in nationalist rhetoric in the
    main opposition party, and a growing recalcitrance in the vast state
    bureaucracies that must implement the sweeping legal, social, and
    economic changes Turkey must make if it is join the EU. In the same
    period, the government's ability to make a case for Europe has been
    severely weakened by the stream of anti-Turkish voices from Europe.

    The then French Prime Minister, Jean-Pierre Raffarin, set the tone
    during the French referendum, when he cast doubt on Turkey's EU bid
    by wondering if it was wise for the 'river of Islam to enter the
    riverbed of secularism in Europe'. (Did they forget to tell him that
    Turkey has been a secular state for more than 80 years?) The great
    man did not intend his remarks for the Turkish public, but of course,
    they read it, too. Now, with Merkel and Chirac promising to block
    Turkey's EU bid altogether, resentment can only grow.

    This is good news for all those inside Turkey who would like to stay
    out of the EU, and especially good news to hardliners who would like
    to see the state and the military returned to their former power, and
    the intelligentsia muzzled. The badmouthing from Europe has greatly
    strengthened their cause. The case against Orhan Pamuk is more grist
    for their mill. Unless it is handled wisely, that is. If you care at
    all about democracy in Turkey, don't let them use him as a pawn.
Working...
X