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The Economist - 19-25March 2005 - City Lights

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  • The Economist - 19-25March 2005 - City Lights

    City lights
    Mar 17th 2005
    >From The Economist print edition


    For Turks who want to get ahead, the places to be are Istanbul or
    Ankara

    TURKEY is divided into two parts. There is Istanbul and its political
    appendage, Ankara, and there is the rest. This "other" Turkey, most
    of it in the east, is a vaguely defined area from which the
    cosmopolitan inhabitants of Istanbul and Ankara carefully insulate
    themselves. Until very recently they would have travelled there only
    under firm instructions from the armed forces or the government.

    Conversely, people from the eastern regions hardly ever made it to
    positions of power. Now, however, there are some easterners in the
    ministerial team. Burhan Yenigun, the mayor of the remote eastern
    city of Van, says some ministers in office today were at school with
    him. In a country where whom you know still matters at least as much
    as what you know, that is helping Turkey's disadvantaged east feel
    more involved in the democratic process.

    The east also happens to be home to many millions of Kurds, whose
    alienation from the mainstream of Ataturk's republic has been a cause
    of dissension and violence almost since the republic was born. When
    one Istanbul company's salesmen go to Diyarbakir, a large Kurdish
    city in the east, the locals say (and not in jest): "The men from
    the republic have arrived."

    Istanbul, home to up to a fifth of Turkey's population, is a
    microcosm of Turkey itself, with migrants from particular regions
    clustering in specific areas. Migration has also made it the largest
    Kurdish city in the world. At the same time it is home to some of the
    trendiest boutiques in Europe. Meandering beside the Sea of Marmara
    and across the Bosphorus for some 40 miles, it houses the
    headquarters of every Turkish company of substance. Even Is Bank, a
    commercial bank set up by Ataturk and his Republican Party in Ankara,
    his own creation, recently moved its headquarters there.

    Istanbul is a handsome, ancient place and a magnet for the rest of
    the nation. It has an air of noisy, amiable chaos. In far-off Rize, a
    city on the Black Sea coast near the border with Georgia, in the
    heart of Turkey's wealthy tea-growing region, an improbably large
    number of cars have Istanbul registration plates, recognisable by the
    prefix "34". The locals explain that anybody in the area who makes
    money immediately goes to Istanbul to spend it.

    Ankara, on the other hand, is a modern place sadly lacking in
    man-made beauty. Many a Turkish civil servant has silently rued the
    day that Ataturk decided to plonk his republic's capital in a
    treeless expanse of Anatolian wasteland, in the interest of shifting
    the nation's centre of gravity away from Istanbul. So devoid was
    Ankara of any structure of note in the early years of the republic
    that civil servants had to live in dormitories.

    Beyond these now lively metropolises lies the "other" Turkey, vast
    tracts of mountainous land stretching from the city of Edirne in the
    west, where Ottoman architecture had its finest flowering, to Kars,
    once capital of the long-defunct South-West Caucasian Republic, now
    wasting near the end of the cul-de-sac leading to Turkey's closed
    border with Armenia.

    The typical inhabitant of this other Turkey today lives in a town,
    not a village, in a standard apartment that is one-quarter of a floor
    in a six- or seven-storey concrete block. These uniform buildings,
    sometimes painted in pastel shades to break the monotony, creep
    across the hillside scrub on the fringes of fast-growing towns from
    Edirne to Sanliurfa. Everywhere the countryside has a half-finished
    look, littered with abandoned buildings.


    Europe's new neighbours

    Around its eastern and southern edges this landmass touches Georgia,
    Iran, Iraq and Syria. With Turkey inside the EU, these will be
    Europe's new neighbours, a Europe whose highest mountain will be
    Mount Ararat, not Mont Blanc; a Europe that will include the northern
    areas of Mesopotamia, the land between the Tigris and Euphrates
    rivers, often considered the cradle of civilisation.

    Turkey's mountainous hinterland is tightly controlled from Ankara,
    which allows the regions little financial autonomy. Ataturk inherited
    the Ottoman system for imposing law and order and for gathering taxes
    and redistributing revenues. At its heart is the vali, the governor
    appointed by the Ministry of Home Affairs in Ankara who is sent out
    to the regions much like ambassadors are to foreign postings.

    Every vali has a huge office, which reflects its occupant's status
    both by its size and by the number of black leather armchairs it
    contains. The great men are surrounded by acolytes in dark suits who
    interrupt continually with requests to sign pieces of paper. In
    Turkey today, as in Ottoman times, little can be done without a
    governor's signature. If a vali is absent or ill, official life-from
    granting a pay rise to a junior employee to authorising a new office
    block-simply goes on hold until the governor can resume signing.


    The middle of nowhere

    The vali system suits a geography in which towns and cities sit in
    bowls surrounded by mountains, isolated and self-contained. The towns
    are joined by long asphalt strips with only the occasional petrol
    station as a diversion. From time to time a village appears in the
    distance. But there is no rural aristocracy or country life of the
    sort you find in western Europe. Turks live in villages not because
    they have chosen to escape to them, but because they have been unable
    to escape from them.

    The other power in town is the local mayor, an official elected for a
    five-year term. Unlike the vali, who comes from many miles away, the
    mayors are usually local folk from the town they represent-often
    local tradesmen, in Trabzon even a former professional footballer.
    Both the mayor and the deputy mayor of Diyarbakir are Kurds. Their
    responsibilities are for the most part limited to transport, drains
    and water, and their revenues come from building permits, local
    property taxes and central-government grants.

    Urban aspirers

    It is now government policy to decentralise control and budgets away
    from the huge and inefficient ministries in the capital. This year
    the "Village Services Department", a 42,000-strong cohort of civil
    servants in Ankara who oversee administration of the villages, is due
    to be disbanded. But this is only a drop in the ocean. Turkey's
    public administration still employs more than 2m bureaucrats.

    Trying to decentralise further, the government says it would like to
    shift power from the vali to the local mayor. Part of the plan is to
    send a different sort of individual to these outposts. Efkan Ala, for
    example, the governor of Diyarbakir, was appointed to the job last
    year at the age of 39. His approach is more informal than that of his
    predecessors. He clearly disapproves of the minder from the security
    services who attends the meeting with your correspondent and takes
    copious notes.

    Last autumn the government was due to transfer large chunks of
    treasury property to the local authorities. Much of it-such as
    sports centres and museums-earns rent and could make a big
    difference to the mayors' budgets, says Volkan Canalioglu, the mayor
    of Trabzon. But the plan was shelved. Perhaps the central
    government's success in getting its own budget under control has made
    it reluctant to let go. "We don't want to end up like a Latin
    American country," says Mr Babacan, the economy minister, "where
    they don't know what their budget is." But the government, he says,
    is still "working on how to share revenues with the regions".
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