Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

How To Talk To Turkey

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • How To Talk To Turkey

    HOW TO TALK TO TURKEY
    by Pelin Turgut, Leo Cendrowicz

    Time International
    September 26, 2005

    Orhan Pamuk is Turkey's most widely read living author. His fame and
    his liberal views have made him a symbol of Turkish aspirations to join
    the European Union. But the decision of a Turkish state prosecutor
    to try him for "publicly denigrating" the nation reinforced European
    ambivalence--in some cases, outright hostility--toward admitting the
    mainly Muslim country.

    Pamuk is due to face trial in December for comments made to the Swiss
    newspaper Tages-Anzeiger in February in which he criticized Turkey's
    refusal to discuss the mass killings of Armenians at the start of the
    last century, as well as the country's more recent Kurdish conflict.

    "Thirty thousand Kurds and a million Armenians were killed in
    these lands and nobody but me dares to talk about it," he said. If
    convicted, he faces up to three years in jail, though few expect such
    an outcome. Instead, the penalty may be paid by all Turks who support
    the move to join the E.U. The European Commission is due to begin
    accession talks with Turkey on Oct. 3, but Dutch Christian Democrat
    M.E.P. Camiel Eurlings wants negotiations suspended if the trial goes
    ahead. Pamuk hopes his case will not count against Turkey's bid.

    "This is without doubt an example of utmost intolerance," he told
    TIME. "But I don't want that intolerance to be an obstacle in Turkey's
    road toward the E.U."

    Since coming to power in 2002, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    has introduced reforms--such as Kurdish cultural rights and curbs on
    the military's political clout--in a bid to meet E.U. standards. But
    the country's old guard still sets its face against change. "There
    has been a huge amount of legal reform, but it takes time for the
    mental transformation to sink in," says one senior Turkish official.

    Cengiz Aktar, a professor at Galatasaray University, says Pamuk's case
    "is a sign of how this accession process is going to go. It's going
    to be a roller coaster of a ride."
Working...
X