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ANKARA: Turkish Islamist press 27 May 05

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  • ANKARA: Turkish Islamist press 27 May 05

    Turkish Islamist press 27 May 05

    BBC Monitoring
    27 May 05


    The following lists selected reports carried in the Turkish Islamist
    press on 27 May:

    Yeni Safak

    Under the banner headline, "OYAK lies in wait," Yeni Safak publishes a
    front-page report which asserts that the Army Mutual Aid Association
    (OYAK) has announced a plan to submit takeover bids for three major
    Turkish concerns, the Turkish Telecom, the Erdemir Iron and Steel
    Works, and the Tupras oil refinery.

    In a 700-word article entitled "Crushing nationalism with nationalism"
    on page 9, Yeni Safak columnist Mustafa Karaalioglu blasts Justice
    Minister Cemil Cicek for his remarks accusing the organizers of a
    dissident conference on the Armenian issue of "backstabbing the
    Turkish nation" and charges him with aligning himself and the ruling
    Justice and Development Party (AKP) with those circles in the country
    that are "violently opposed" to the Government's efforts to qualify
    Turkey for EU membership and promote democratization and individual
    freedoms.

    In a 900-word article entitled "I have questions" on page 13, Yeni
    Safak columnist Ahmet Tasgetiren asks whether Professor Halil Berktay,
    one of the organizers of the postponed symposium on the Armenian
    issue, would have accepted the Armenian accusations of genocide and
    apologized to the Armenians if he had been prime minister of Turkey in
    1915, whether he would have agreed to pay damages to Armenia, and how
    his administration would have dealt with Armenian territorial demands
    from Turkey. Tasgetiren also asserts that there is a virtual consensus
    among those able to view the developments involving the Armenian
    conference objectively that the academic quality of the meeting was
    rendered doubtful by the announcement that the participants would
    consist of people opposed to the "official" opinion on the Armenian
    issue.

    Vakit

    Under the banner headline, "491bn dollars for massacre," Vakit
    publishes a front-page report which accuses the United States of
    allocating some 491bn dollars for military purposes "in order to carry
    out more massacres and atrocities" in the name of "bringing freedom
    and democracy." Published along with the report is a cartoon showing
    an amazed bystander looking at a changed US flag where the stripes
    have been replaced with three smoking guns.

    Also front-paged in Vakit is a report entitled "Commonsense in
    parliament," which lauds the National Assembly for adopting a motion
    by a group of AKP deputies calling for an amendment to Article 263 of
    the Turkish Penal Code (TCK), which prescribes up to three years of
    imprisonment for those holding Koran classes in their homes.

    Another front-page report, entitled "My relatives wear headscarves. I
    am a first-hand witness to the headscarf problem," quotes Deputy Prime
    Minister Abdullatif Sener as saying that the headscarf issue could be
    solved only through a changed perception of Islamic headdresses (on
    the part of the Establishment). This report is expanded into a
    700-word interview with Sener on page 8.

    According to a 450-word report entitled "Anti-US intellectuals to
    march to Incirlik" on age 6, a group of intellectuals opposed to the
    United States use' of Incirlik Air Base for logistical purposes
    against Iraq and Afghanistan are going to Adana today to hold a
    demonstration in front of Incirlik Air Base calling for the closure of
    the base. According to the report, this activity has been organized by
    the Global Peace and Justice Commission and the East Conference Group.

    In an 800-word article entitled "Where are we headed?" on page 11,
    Vakit columnist Abdurrahman Dilipak asserts that "the atmosphere ahead
    of the Bush-Erdogan meeting on 8 June is very tense," adding that
    Erdogan is anxious because he knows that if he does not accept Bush's
    demands, the US president will "set the wheels in motion" for a new
    government in Turkey. He goes on to accuse Cemil Cicek of defending
    the undemocratic "28 February mentality" in "trying to retain the
    obstacles to freedom of faith and freedom of speech in the new TCK."
    He also criticizes Cicek for his stance on the dissident conference on
    Armenian claims with: "Has it fallen to us to defend the murders
    committed by the Committee of Union and Progress?"

    Zaman

    Under the headline, "Turkey becomes a venue for international events,"
    Zaman publishes a front-page report which asserts that Turkey is
    attracting international publicity as well as raking in millions of
    dollars by hosting such events as last year's NATO Summit, the
    European Champion Clubs' Cup Final, and Formula 1.


    In a 900-word article entitled "Apologetics or evidential defence" on
    page 16, Zaman columnist Alev Alatli compares the organizers of the
    postponed conference on Armenian claims to Christian apologists who
    further their cause through "selective perception," i.e. through
    ignoring facts that contradict their arguments and "eloquently
    exaggerating" others that suit their purposes. She also asserts that
    there is nothing surprising abut the way in which the planners of the
    meeting are using the "excuse" of "freedom of speech" and "academic
    freedom" to justify such conferences given that they all espouse
    Turkey's accession to the European Union.

    In a 700-word article entitled "Either union or progress" on page 17,
    Zaman columnist Etyen Mahcupyan accuses Turkey's administrative
    "elite" of announcing to the world that this country is not a
    democracy in obstructing the Bogazici University conference on the
    Armenian issue. He also argues that no social progress can be achieved
    on the basis of the state's concept of "union."

    Milli Gazete

    Under the banner headline, "We need the spirit of conquest," Milli
    Gazete publishes a front-page report which warns that the government's
    privatization policy entails the "giving away" of "our national
    assets" to "foreigners" and that "our national values" face the threat
    of an "imperialist occupation." The report calls for participation in
    the Conquest and Youth Festival being held by the Felicity Party in
    Izmit tomorrow.

    In a 500-word article entitled "Faith and implication" on page 13,
    Milli Gazete columnist Necat Cavus provides a "summary" of Samuel
    Huntington's recent speech at a conference in Istanbul and asserts
    that "we should not let charlatans like Huntington discourage and
    confuse us" by getting across the message that Turkey cannot become an
    EU member because it is "dependent" on the United States and that "it
    should assume an active role as a US base in the United States'
    operations against Islamic countries."

    Dunden Bugune Tercuman

    In an 850-word article entitled "To be able to look into the future"
    on page 11, Tercuman columnist Cengiz Candar argues that the
    "possibility" of a Nicolas Sarkozy era in France and of a Christian
    Democratic government in Germany led by Angela Merkel "does not
    automatically mean" that Turkey will lose its EU prospects, adding
    that both Sarkozy and Merkel attach importance to consolidating
    trans-Atlantic relations and it is highly possible that Ankara's
    efforts to improve its relations with Washington will eventually cause
    Sarkozy and Merkel to change their attitude towards Turkey.
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