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  • Pope flies into a Turkish cauldron

    The Times, UK
    Nov 26 2006

    Pope flies into a Turkish cauldron
    Matthew Campbell, Istanbul



    WITH his thick black moustache he looks a bit like Borat, the Kazakh
    journalist in the hit Hollywood film, but Kemal Kerincsiz, a lawyer,
    is far from comical when he inveighs against enemies of the Turkish
    state.
    The latest target of his displeasure is Pope Benedict XVI. Kerincsiz
    has led an energetic campaign to halt the visit of the 79-year-old
    pontiff, arriving on Tuesday, on the grounds that it is part of a
    `foreign plot' against Turkey. Not only had the Pope insulted Islam
    in a speech he made in September, Kerincsiz said, but he was planning
    a `provocative' meeting in Istanbul with the head of Orthodox
    Christianity. `We do not want him here. He should not come.'



    Behind him on his office wall was a poster of the Pope as a fanged
    serpent which Kerincsiz has been handing out to supporters. He has
    also been bombarding government offices with `Stop the Pope' e-mails
    and faxes. Today he will attend a big demonstration against the Pope
    in Istanbul.

    The Pope could hardly have picked a trickier moment for his visit,
    just as debate is reaching a bitter climax over whether to let Turkey
    and its 70m, predominantly Muslim, citizens into the European Union.

    America and Britain are strongly in favour of keeping Turkey firmly
    in the western fold but Kerincsiz and his Lawyers' Union are part of
    a nationalist movement trying to pull it in the other direction.
    Recent events, from the Pope's comments about Islam to French efforts
    to outlaw denial of the Turkish massacre of Armenians at the end of
    the first world war, have worked in their favour.

    The ultimate goal is to revive the Ottoman empire but, for the time
    being, they must content themselves with a campaign to defend Turkey
    against enemies.

    It was Kerincsiz who brought a lawsuit against Orhan Pamuk, the Nobel
    prize-winning author, earlier this year for accusing Turkey of
    genocide against Armenians. `The Armenians were deported, not
    killed,' he insisted.

    All of this risks jeopardising the country's drive to modernity and
    it is little surprise that talks with the EU on Turkish membership
    have recently turned sour.

    An increasingly impatient Brussels has repeatedly called on Turkey to
    repeal article 301, the law being used by Kerincsiz to attack freedom
    of speech. On Thursday, in a development unlikely to cheer the Pope,
    two Christians went on trial under article 301 for insulting
    `Turkishness' and inciting religious hatred while trying to convert
    Turks to Christianity.

    Brussels has given Turkey until December 6 to let Cypriot ships into
    its ports or risk seeing its application for EU membership rejected.
    This has put Turks in an angry sulk over the `crusader mentality' of
    the Europeans, hardly an encouraging context for a papal visit.

    The Pope once warned that letting Turkey into the EU would be `a
    grave error against the tide of history' and he has become, for many,
    a symbol of western hostility towards Turkey.

    For Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the moderate prime minister, it is an
    extremely unwelcome predicament. An election is looming next year and
    in order not to alienate voters he has pleaded a prior engagement - a
    Nato summit in Riga - to avoid going anywhere near the Pope.

    Muslim protests against the pontiff will not go down well in
    Brussels, reviving perennial speculation about the threat to the
    strong, secular democracy established by Atatürk, the founder of
    modern Turkey.

    A draconian security plan involving 12,000 policemen is being
    implemented in Istanbul to prevent any violent backlash against the
    Pope. Snipers will be posted on rooftops. Sewers will be searched for
    bombs.

    The authorities are right to be nervous. There has been a string of
    attacks against Christian clergymen since the Pope's speech in
    September when he quoted a 14th-century Byzantine leader as saying
    that the Muslims had spread their faith `by the sword' and brought
    things `only evil and inhuman'.

    Earlier this month, a man fired a pistol in the air outside the
    Italian consulate in Istanbul, shouting slogans against the Pope,
    whose predecessor, John Paul II, was shot in the stomach by a Turkish
    assailant in Rome.
    On Wednesday, tourists were removed by police from the 6th-century
    Byzantine Hagia Sophia Church, a famous Istanbul landmark, when about
    100 nationalists staged an anti-Pope protest. The church was
    converted into a mosque when the Ottomans conquered the city -
    Constantinople, as it was known - in 1453, but is now a museum and
    one of the venues on the papal itinerary.



    For today's demonstration, an Islamist party is planning to ferry
    around 75,000 people on buses into Istanbul. Kerincsiz said his group
    was planning to stage other protests during the visit but did not
    support violence.

    Not yet at least. Instead of membership of the EU, he advocates
    restoration of a Turkic empire stretching from former Ottoman
    provinces in the Balkans right up into Central Asia. Achieving this
    would presumably involve a certain amount of swordplay.

    It matters little to him that Atatürk, his hero whose portrait hangs
    in his office, was in favour of westernisation, urging his citizens
    to waltz and wear western clothes and introducing a Roman alphabet
    and Swiss penal code. `Being in the EU, we would not be able to
    restore our empire,' said Kerincsiz.

    He is helped by growing frustration over sacrifices being demanded by
    Brussels. A poll last week showed that 60% were in favour of halting
    talks with the EU. `The attitude seems to be that if you don't want
    us, we certainly don't want you,' said a western diplomat. `Turkey
    feels terribly unloved.'

    Turks are notoriously sensitive about how they are seen in the West.
    It explains what happened in Washington last week when one of
    Turkey's top army generals stormed out of the White House in protest
    after guards tried to frisk him before a meeting.

    Try bargaining in Istanbul and see what happens. `Do you think that
    you can pay what you like just because we are in Turkey and not in
    London?' complained an irate shop owner when a tourist offered less
    than what seemed an exorbitant amount for a ceramic pot.

    Because of the prospect, albeit distant, of becoming part of the EU,
    the economy is booming - it attracts more foreign investment than any
    other Mediterranean country - and by reducing the political role of
    the army and curbing abuses of human rights Turkey has taken big
    steps towards Europe. Yet in Turkish eyes, Europe keeps asking for
    more: `We will never satisfy them,' said Cengiz Bilgin, a teacher.
    `It is clear they don't really want us in their club.'

    The argument appears to be gaining ground and the growth of
    Kerincsiz's group to 800 members in Istanbul alone over the past few
    years suggests that he may have a future.

    Call for and to anti-Christian laws

    The Pope will stand up for Christian minority rights on his visit to
    Turkey this week, writes Christopher Morgan. According to advisers,
    he will call for an end to Turkey's anti-Christian discrimination
    laws that make it difficult for churches to own property and run
    seminaries. Cardinal Walter Kasper said: `The treatment of Christian
    minorities will have to be sorted out if Turkey is to join the
    European Union.' Under EU pressure, Turkey passed a law this month
    strengthening Christian churches' property rights, but Orthodox
    leaders say this is not enough. Call for end to anti-Christian laws

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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