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Turkey: welcome to Europe

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  • Turkey: welcome to Europe

    Turkey: welcome to Europe

    Le Monde diplomatique
    November 2004

    By Ignacio Ramonet

    The debate about Turkey's impending membership of the European Union -
    planned for 2015 - has been characterised by overblown rhetoric and lack
    of finesse. Framed in terms of the "clash of civilisations", it
    testifies to the identity crisis of western societies when faced with
    Islam. It also reveals the anti-Islamic sentiment lurking in almost
    every sector of the political classes.

    Some have advanced "technical" arguments against Turkish entry,
    reckoning that Europe will instinctively reject the membership of a
    large country with a Muslim majority. They argue that Turkey should be
    disqualified because of its geography, since much of the country is in
    Asia Minor. This is absurd. French Guyana in Latin America and Réunion
    in the middle of the Indian Ocean are both part of the European Union.

    We should remember that the Aegean coast of Turkey, the location of
    ancient Troy, was the east wing of ancient Greece, the cradle of
    European civilisation. (We wonder what "technical" arguments will be put
    forward to prevent the membership of two other countries with Muslim
    majorities, Bosnia and Albania, whose geographic place in Europe is
    undeniable.)

    Others invoke history. The European commissioner Frits Bolkestein
    recently went so far as to say that if Turkey is admitted to the EU "the
    liberation of Vienna [after the siege by the Turks] in 1683 will have
    been in vain" (1). (During that siege the Viennese, known for their
    excellent bakeries, had to ration flour; they made small bread rolls
    shaped like the crescent moon symbol of the Ottoman empire. Most people
    think of these familiar pastries - croissants - as typically French.)

    The Ottoman empire, as successor to the Byzantine empire, had ambitions
    to dominate the Mediterranean and Europe, a project that was shattered
    several times, especially at the Battle of Lepanto in 1521. But such
    ambitions do not mean that Turkey is anti-European by nature. Other
    countries - notably Spain, France and Germany - also cherished projects
    for subjugating the continent, and nobody would suggest that they are
    not truly European.

    Like the Austro-Hungarian and Russian empires, which vanished from
    history, and the colonial empires, which were all dismembered,
    overextended military campaigns wore out the Ottoman empire by the
    beginning of the 20th century (which is why it was called "the sick man
    of Europe"). Having lost its possessions in the Balkans and the Arab
    world, the new Turkey founded by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk embarked
    resolutely on Europeanisation.

    No country has ever agreed to sacrifice so many fundamental aspects of
    its culture in order to affirm its European identity. Modern Turkey went
    so far as to abandon its old Arabic alphabet, replacing it with Roman
    letters; Turks were obliged to abandon traditional dress and wear
    western clothing; and, in the name of an official secularism inspired by
    a law passed in France in 1905, Islam ceased to be the state religion.

    Throughout the 20th century Turkey continually consolidated its European
    character. In the early 1950s it joined Nato and later the Council of
    Europe. By 1963 General de Gaulle and Chancellor Adenauer had recognised
    its suitability as a candidate for membership of Europe. A customs
    treaty was signed in 1995. Once the European Council meetings in
    Helsinki (1999) and Copenhagen (2002) had confirmed that Turkey could
    apply for membership (2), Ankara embarked on silent revolution to fulfil
    the necessary criteria.

    Turkey has made progress in enacting democratic reforms. The state
    security courts are about to be dismantled; the death penalty has been
    abolished; juridical tolerance of crimes of honour against women is no
    longer allowed; a proposed law for criminalising adultery has been
    abandoned. In Kurdish territories the state of emergency has been
    lifted; teaching in the Kurdish language is now permitted; a
    Kurdish-language TV channel has been set up; and four former MPs
    imprisoned for political activity have been released.

    There is still much to be done on civil liberties and basic human
    rights. Turkey also needs to recognise formally the genocide of the
    Armenians in 1915. And an amnesty will be required for ex-fighters of
    the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) to release more than 3,000 of its
    imprisoned activists, including its leader, Abdullah Öcalan.

    But the prospect of EU membership has already reinforced Turkey's
    democratisation, secularism and respect for human rights. For the other
    major countries of the Eastern Mediterranean, Turkey's membership will
    provide a concrete message of hope, peace, prosperity and democracy.

    NOTES

    (1) Financial Times, 8 September 2004.

    (2) Under the proposed timetable, negotiations will begin in 2006 and
    conclude in 2015.

    Translated by Ed Emery

    http://mondediplo.com/2004/11/01Ramonet
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