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WORLD VIEWS: Turkey's Bid To Enter EU Has World-Shaping Significance

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  • WORLD VIEWS: Turkey's Bid To Enter EU Has World-Shaping Significance

    WORLD VIEWS: TURKEY'S BID TO ENTER EU HAS WORLD-SHAPING SIGNIFICANCE
    Edward M. Gomez, special to SF Gate

    San Francisco Gate
    Oct 4 2005

    As the 25-member strong European Union gets ready to begin direct
    negotiations with Turkey over its bid to join the political and
    economic Euro-club, debate over the predominantly Muslim country
    has become more heated than ever. At issue, opponents of Turkey's EU
    bid argue, are "the consequence[s] of welcoming in[to the EU group]
    a poor, culturally alien nation whose population of 70 million could
    one day make it the largest [European] Union state" -- drastically
    changing Europe's historic character. On the other hand, as the mayor
    of one Turkish Mediterranean resort put it, both the EU and Turkey
    "stand to benefit from each other in equal measure. We are a young,
    secular Muslim country that offers to help broaden Europe."

    (Telegraph)

    Governments of all but one of the current EU member states had
    officially shared that optimistic outlook and had backed Turkey's
    bid to eventually be allowed to join the group. Until late yesterday,
    the only holdout was Austria.

    Vienna had insisted that, instead of being weighed for full-fledged
    membership, Turkey should be considered only for a lesser, "privileged
    partnership" in the EU. (Der Kurier/Independent) Austria's adamant
    position threatened to prevent long-anticipated direct talks between
    the EU and Turkey on its membership bid from moving forward.

    Finally, by yesterday evening, the Austrian government had pulled back
    and appeared to be on the same page as its 24 EU partners, making
    it possible for negotiations with Turkey to proceed. But just hours
    before the diplomatic breakthrough, with the EU-Turkey talks on the
    verge of collapse, British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw warned that
    the EU was "standing on the edge of a precipice." (Britain holds the
    EU's rotating presidency.) (Guardian)

    Like Straw, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has
    championed his country's EU-membership bid, feels strongly that
    Turkey's inclusion in the European organization "would help to build a
    bridge between Christian and Muslim countries." During the final days
    of the Austrian impasse that had threatened to hold up yesterday's
    scheduled start of direct EU-Turkey negotiations, Erdogan told his
    ruling Justice and Development Party that the debate over Turkey
    was "a test for the E.U." He said: "The E.U. will either decide
    to become a global actor or it must accept that it is a Christian
    club." Erdogan "said Turkey's future did not depend on membership,
    but he claimed that the future of relations between Christianity and
    Islam did." (Financial Times)

    Erdogan also emphasized that no matter how Austria's original
    demand that Turkey only be allowed a diminished EU membership status
    ultimately played out, his country would not "deviate ... from its
    course" of further democratization and reform. The Turkish leader
    added that his people would, "however, be saddened that a project
    for the alliance of civilisations [would] be harmed." (Independent)

    Europe and Turkey Weigh In

    Officially -- now that Austria's position appears to have changed --
    the governments of all 25 EU member countries support Turkey's bid
    to join the continental club, but dissent is still palpable -- and
    even widespread -- across Europe and among some Turks, too.

    Prominent opponents of Turkey's accession to the European Union include
    former French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing, who spearheaded the
    effort to write the draft EU constitution that referendum voters in
    France and the Netherlands rejected earlier this year.

    In Austria, where the government, until yesterday's change of position,
    had insisted that it was "speaking for those across the E.U. who
    [did] not support [Turkey's] accession," a new Austria Press Agency
    poll published last Sunday indicated that 54 percent of EU citizens
    now "oppose Turkey joining the bloc," with "[t]he figure ris[ing]
    to 73 percent in Austria, where a historical antagonism towards
    Turkish Ottoman imperialism combines with modern-day fears of Muslim
    immigration from the poor east." (Guardian)

    If admitted, "Turkey would become the E.U.'s first Muslim member"
    and "the [group]'s second-largest country after Germany. It would
    also be the bloc's poorest country, with gross domestic product per
    person at a quarter of the E.U. average." (ADN Kronos International)

    On the plus side, Turkey's supporters in Europe have argued that "the
    lure of E.U. membership has already brought great improvements --
    notably, the abolition of the death penalty -- in its human-rights
    record." However, opponents of Turkey's EU-membership bid "say it
    has not sufficiently improved its human-rights record. It has not yet
    recognized Greek Cyprus, an E.U. member, and it disputes the general
    view that its campaign against the Armenians in 1915 was a genocide."

    (The Age)

    It is significant, too -- bearing in mind centuries-old cultural
    differences between what are now Turkey and Europe, and the fact
    that only a small portion of Turkey's territory lies geographically
    in what is normally thought of as the European continent -- for those
    who oppose Ankara's EU bid that "this is not merely an argument about
    Turkey. It is an argument about the identity of Europe." Many Europeans
    who oppose Turkey's EU bid feel that they will be sacrificing their
    collective identity if the modern state that emerged from the ashes
    of the Ottoman Empire is allowed to join the group. Their "anxiety
    was best summed up in Denmark, where a Muslim headscarf was recently
    placed on the 'Little Mermaid' statue in Copenhagen with the words:
    'Turkey in the EU?'" written on an accompanying sign. (The Age)

    Turkey's bid to join the EU isn't without controversy at home, either:
    This past weekend in Ankara, thousands of supporters of the Nationalist
    Movement Party took to the streets to protest the plan.

    (EFE/Terra Espaņa)

    "[U]ltra-nationalists from all around the country" came to hear party
    leader Devlet Bahceli assail Erdogan's government for making Turkey
    have to face "an environment of enmity from outside and an environment
    of treason from within. ..." Bahceli pointed out, critically, "that
    Turkey was being insulted at every E.U. gathering."

    (Turkish Daily News; registration required)

    In reaction to Austria digging in its heels and not yielding on
    its anti-Turkey position, and other criticism from Europe, Turkish
    President Ahmet Necdet Sezer and Speaker of the Parliament Bulent
    Arinc had noted that their country had been on the receiving end of
    discrimination by some Europeans.

    Nevertheless, Sezer asserted that, eventually, Turkey's "E.U.

    [membership-accession] process would be completed" without his
    countrymen having to give up any of their "national interest" or
    "self-esteem." He said: "It is to no one's benefit to build walls of
    prejudice around Europe. Every obstacle that will be put in front of
    us will be the stones of a wall that will block Europe."

    "Arinc indicat[ed that] the E.U. sets irrational and illogical
    conditions [and] said: 'This is not a country [that] is helpless and
    obliged to Europe.'" He said Turkey would not "sacrifice everything,"
    including its self-esteem, to join the EU. (Zaman Online)

    Meanwhile, Britain's Times noted (as did EFE/Terra Espaņ), "Support
    for joining the E.U. is falling in Turkey, from three-quarters [of
    the overall population] a year ago to two-thirds now."

    Many Turks have been deeply offended by what they've perceived as
    "foot-dragging by some European countries" with regard to their
    country's EU bid. At the same time, "there is a growing body of
    nationalist and traditionalist opinion, angered by the abrupt changes
    in Turkish society, that would rather pull out of accession talks
    altogether [rather] than [have to] submit to the ... straitjacket"
    of rules and regulations issued by the EU's central bureaucracy,
    which is based in Brussels. (The Times)

    Will Turkey Face Its Past -- and Its Present?

    Serious consideration of Turkey's desire to join the European Union
    means that some of the most controversial aspects of its modern
    history and politics, whose impacts are still being felt today,
    will be coming up for open and, for some Turks, unsettling discussion.

    Among them: Turkey's treatment of its ethnic Armenian population and
    its ongoing occupation of the northern part of the island of Cyprus.

    "Territorial disputes with neighboring countries, rule by the military,
    a record of repression of minorities and human-rights violations,
    economic underdevelopment and low indicators of human development
    render Turkey unable to match up to E.U. member countries and
    unsuitable for membership." So notes Hratch Varjabedian, an Armenian
    journalist based in Lebanon, in the op-ed pages of the Daily Star
    (Beirut) -- and those are some of his milder criticisms.

    Pointing to issues which, inevitably, the European Union's current
    member states will have to examine when considering Turkey's accession
    bid, Varjabedian also notes that "Turkey continues to be an invader of
    Cyprus's territory, a neighboring country and a member of the E.U.,"
    and "[d]espite pressures from E.U. leaders ... still refuses to
    officially recognize the Republic of Cyprus. ..." Worse, Varjabedian
    suggests, is Turkey's ongoing "repression of its Kurdish population
    and other minorities ... despite some reforms." He points out that,
    in Turkey, "[f]reedom of expression is often curbed; recognition of
    the Armenian Genocide [which began in 1915] and statements in favor
    of Turkey's withdrawal from Cyprus are considered punishable crimes
    under the newly reformed Turkish Penal Code."

    What critics of modern Turkey's whitewashing of its history do not
    respect is the way the government's hear-no-evil, see-no-evil view
    of the nation's past is expressed in official policies. Varjabedian
    notes that Ankara "threatens" countries that "recogniz[e] or [plan] to
    recognize the Armenian Genocide," and that "lands rightfully belonging
    to Armenians, namely Western Armenia, are still occupied [by Turks]."

    "In an attempt to conceal the Armenian identity of these lands and
    erase traces of Armenian existence on them," Varjabedian writes,
    "Turkey regularly destroys centuries-old Armenian monuments." (Daily
    Star)

    Positive Signs

    As dark as some aspects of modern Turkey's past may appear and, as
    some critics claim, as oppressively as its government may sometimes
    act today, some observers find signs of positive change in events like
    a recent -- and historic -- conference at Istanbul's private Bilgi
    University, at which, for the first time ever in Turkey (Turkish Daily
    News), speakers dared to publicly address the controversial subject
    of the Ottoman Turks' treatment of the Armenians (ArmeniaNow.com).

    Although "[n]ationalist demonstrators hurled eggs and tomatoes
    at participants as they arrived" for the gathering 10 days ago
    (Reuters/Aljazeera.net), the twice-delayed confab went ahead (Turkish
    Daily News). During the event, "[p]rotesters waved Turkish flags and
    chanted slogans accusing the conference participants of betraying the
    nation," but the liberal Turkish newspaper Radikal proudly noted that
    at the conference, where free speech and open discussion prevailed,
    "the word 'genocide' was uttered ... but the world is still turning,
    and Turkey is still in its place." Likewise, the daily Milliyet noted:
    "Another taboo is destroyed. The conference began, but the day of
    judgement did not come." (Reuters/Aljazeera.net)

    Indeed, notes Jean Gureghian, an architect, author and editor of the
    newsletter of the Armenian Democratic Liberal Party, "[t]he debate over
    Turkey's entry into the European Union creates favorable conditions
    under which to pressure it to recognize [the] genocide [of Armenians
    during World War I], which it has denied up until now."

    Gureghian argues that no matter how hard Turkey officially tries to
    deny this chapter of its modern past, "the Armenian question still
    exists." "Every crime deserves punishment, and the crime of genocide
    .. deserves even more to be punished. ... [T]he contemporary heirs.

    of the Ottoman Empire must respond, sooner or later, to the crime
    that was committed against the Armenian people and make reparations
    [for it]." (Le Figaro)

    Meanwhile, the internationally acclaimed Turkish author Orhan Pamuk
    is set "to stand trial for writing about the [Armenian genocide]
    in a recent newspaper article."

    "[A]ccording to many historians," the Armenian genocide "claimed the
    lives of some 1.5 million Armenians." Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan
    "has defended ... Pamuk ... but ... argues [that] his hands are tied"
    and that the media have "to understand that this case ... does not
    involve the country's executive and legislative powers, but [rather
    that of] the judiciary. It's up to the magistrates to evaluate the
    facts, and we have to respect their decisions." (La Repubblica,
    cited by ADN Kronos International)

    **** Maybe, in some small ways that do not make international
    headlines, some Turks have begun to acknowledge their disturbing
    past -- and to atone for it, too. The Times' Ben Macintyre writes,
    for example, that on "a tiny island in the middle of Lake Van,
    on the far eastern edge of Turkey, a team of architects is working
    feverishly to restore one of the most beautiful religious buildings
    in the world." There the correspondent for the British daily found
    "Holy Cross Church, on Akdamar Island," which "was built by the
    Armenian King Gagik in [A.D.

    921] and was once the spiritual focus for more than a million Armenian
    Christians."

    Today, the church remains empty, for Akdamar Island's "entire
    Armenian population ... was killed or driven away by Turks and Kurdish
    militias during the First World War. ..." Recently, though, Macintyre
    reports, Muslim stonemasons began "rebuilding this church without a
    congregation." "The scaffolding-clad church is proof that attitudes
    are changing but it is also a poignant symbol of how much work --
    economic, political, cultural and historical -- still needs to be
    completed," he writes.

    --Boundary_(ID_ng6Pin/7gA8wOxCB5qZCIg)--
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