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Turkey's Muslim conflicts troubling

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  • Turkey's Muslim conflicts troubling

    Gwinnett Daily Post, GA
    May 28 2006

    What others are saying
    05/27/2006

    Turkey's Muslim conflicts troubling

    Last week's murder of a prominent Turkish judge, ostensibly by an
    Islamist aggrieved at his court's ruling on the headscarf
    controversy, throws a worrying spotlight on the growing rift between
    the government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, with its roots in political
    Islam, and the secular establishment, militant defenders of the
    legacy of Kemal AtatJurk. This division is being magnified by the
    stand-offishness - real or perceived - of the European Union towards
    Turkey's accession ambitions. That is a potentially poisonous
    combination.
    Turkey's powerful military and Kemalist bureaucracy has always been
    profoundly suspicious of Erdogan and his Justice and Development
    party (AKP), built from the rubble of more overtly Islamist parties
    and broadened into a Muslim democrat movement analogous to Christian
    Democracy. While both sides engage with each other in a wary pas de
    deux, each occasionally puts its foot in it.
    The government's attempt to criminalize adultery, and the state's
    attempt to prosecute Orhan Pamuk, the world-renowned novelist, for
    denouncing the mass murder of Armenians in the late Ottoman empire,
    are memorable examples of such blunders. But they were recognized as
    such and withdrawn.
    The Erdogan administration tried recently to impose an Islamic banker
    - who eschews interest as usury - as head of the central bank, which
    sets interest rates. But it reconsidered.
    Meanwhile, Turkish perceptions of EU bad faith are encouraging
    popular disillusion with Europe and proving a godsend to the
    nationalist right and hardline Islamists. Ankara formally started
    membership talks last autumn, a process always expected to last a
    good decade. Its requirements, in minority, human and democratic
    rights as well as adopting the EU rules, were always going to
    guarantee a bumpy ride. But in the backwash of last year's French and
    Dutch rejection of the EU constitution, hostility to Turkish
    membership has hardened. To Turks, alert to every slight, the EU
    often seems to be conducting a moral inventory rather than a
    negotiation.
    Europe is not only the engine of reform but the glue of political
    cohesion in Turkey. EU membership is a national project shared by the
    people, business and the army, and embraced by the AKP as a shield
    against the generals. The European perspective, in other words, is a
    good part of the explanation of why this Muslim democracy and secular
    republic works, despite its unresolved contradictions. (FT)
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