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Turkey Mistreats Minorities; Does Not Merit EU Membership

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  • Turkey Mistreats Minorities; Does Not Merit EU Membership

    TURKEY MISTREATS MINORITIES; DOES NOT MERIT EU MEMBERSHIP
    by Kyle Szarzynski

    UW Badger Herald, WI
    Nov 29 2006

    The pope's recent visit to Turkey and his call for the nation's
    acceptance into the European Union has added an interesting element
    to the debate about Turkey's inclusion into the EU. It is now more
    difficult to pitch the issue as one between the West and the Middle
    East, or Christianity and Islam, because the most Christian and
    Western of institutions - the Roman Catholic Church - has embraced
    the notion of Turkish membership in the ever-more powerful EU.

    And yet this approach, as good intentioned as it may be, misses a
    crucial component of the issue: Turkey's non-Christian and non-Western
    essence equates to fundamentally non-European values and is thus
    not suitable for EU membership. This differing system of values has
    concrete political and cultural implications, making it inapt for
    Turkey and European states to exist under the umbrella of the same
    supranational political and economic organization.

    The Europe of 2006 is by no means a perfect society, as it is plagued
    by, among other things, unemployment, racism and the steady erosion
    of the welfare state. Still, the European ideals of community-based
    politics, a social safety net, universal education and cooperation
    have made the continent the world leader of progress. The relative
    equality and justice of European society are the envy of countries
    all over the world, including the United States (the 35-hour work
    week, for example, is something that American workers can only dream
    about). The state of Europe today goes hand-in-hand with its seemingly
    paradoxical Christian foundation (including the emphasis on human
    solidarity and equality) and a strong commitment to secular humanism.

    This makes quite a contrast to Turkey. Despite the country's reputation
    as a liberal, Muslim state, its acceptance into the EU would still
    stand out like an ink blot on the organization's map. One notable
    difference between Turkey and the rest of Europe is the power of the
    military, which has staged four coups since 1960. In recent years,
    the armed forces has succumbed to EU pressure and limited its meddling
    in political affairs. However, this has been only a mixed blessing,
    as the secular military serves as the only bulwark against the growing
    power of the Islamic fundamentalists, whose representation in the
    country's legislature has, alarmingly, been steadily increasing. The
    reality is that many secular progressives in Turkey actually see the
    military as a lesser evil to the threat of Islamic extremists. This
    pessimistic political dynamic amounts to a lose-lose situation for
    those who believe that Turkish political practices can be reconciled
    with those of Europe's.

    Turkey's suppression of human rights is yet another problem. Its abuse
    of the Kurdish minority has caused worldwide condemnation. In the
    struggle against separatist rebels, like the Kurdistan Workers Party,
    it is estimated that more than 30,000 people have been killed since
    the 1980s. The brutality of the military's treatment of the Kurds
    has manifested itself in the use of poison gas and mass bombings
    of villages.

    Free speech is also lacking. While Europe has arguably gone to one
    extreme in criminalizing the act of denying the Holocaust, Turkey
    has made it a crime to even acknowledge its own history of genocide
    against the Armenians. The Nobel Prize-winning novelist, Orhan Pamuk,
    was brought up on charges of "insulting Turkishness" after he remarked
    that, "Thirty thousand Kurds and a million Armenians were killed in
    these lands, and nobody dares to talk about it."

    International outrage ensued, and the charges were later dropped.

    The relative backwardness of Turkish political institutions is only
    one deterrent to EU membership. The cultural attitudes of the people,
    which are at least partially responsible for the existence of such
    institutions, are another. The anti-European attitudes of the Turkish
    people were recently exemplified in a poll conducted by the Milliyet
    newspaper Oct. 24, which showed that two-thirds of the Turkish people
    don't even want to join the EU. Government prosecution of Christian
    converts and recent plans to construct female-only parks have,
    similarly, been greeted with support by most Turks.

    Such sentiment is the product of a country that has lived under
    military rule for decades and continues to be held back by reactionary
    religious ideas. It is all too clear that Turkish institutions and
    Turkish ideas are clearly not European ones. Once this is realized,
    the foolishness of admitting a non-European nation into the European
    Union becomes all too obvious.

    Kyle Szarzynski ([email protected]) is a sophomore majoring in
    Spanish and history.

    http://badgerherald.com/oped/2006/11/29/ turkey_mistreats_min.php
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