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Free-Speech Case Can't Hide Progress

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  • Free-Speech Case Can't Hide Progress

    FREE-SPEECH CASE CAN'T HIDE PROGRESS
    by Soli Ozel

    The International Herald Tribune
    September 8, 2005 Thursday

    In December, the internationally renowned Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk
    is scheduled to appear in court here for having "blatantly belittled
    Turkishness." If convicted he faces six months to three years in
    prison. His offense? Having said to a Swiss newspaper in February:
    "Thirty thousand Kurds and one million Armenians were killed in
    Turkey. Almost no one dares to speak out on this but me."

    Pamuk's indictment last week by a district prosecutor here was
    undoubtedly an affront to the principle of freedom of expression as
    was the vicious campaign by ultranationalists that followed Pamuk's
    remarks, including death threats that led him to leave Turkey for a
    couple of months. In December, the court should throw out the charges
    against him.

    But those, especially in the West, who would use the indictment against
    Pamuk to denigrate Turkey's progress toward greater civil rights and
    toward European Union membership are ignoring the distance that the
    country has covered in the past decade.

    For one thing, public debate in Turkey has in fact become much more
    open and varied, particularly on the Armenian issue. For another,
    though some liberals took exception to Pamuk's wording and the platform
    he chose, in the end Turkey's democratic voices unequivocally defended
    his right to express his views.

    In addition, the very justice system that brought down the indictment
    against Pamuk is deeply divided between those who favor a more modern,
    liberal judicial mentality and those who are uncomfortable with such
    an opening: Only two months ago, the Istanbul prosecutor's office
    had decided that Pamuk's words were indeed protected by free speech.

    A month from now, Pamuk is scheduled to receive the prestigious
    Peace Award of the German Publishers and Writers Association. For
    evidence of how far Turkey has come, it might pay to go revisit the
    moment eight years ago when the grand old man of Turkish literature,
    Yasar Kemal, received the same award.

    At the time, Kemal had just been sentenced to 20 months in prison,
    with his sentence suspended on condition that he did not commit the
    same "crime" within five years. His crime was an article entitled
    "Dark Clouds Over Turkey," in which he severely criticized the Turkish
    government's policies toward its Kurdish citizens.

    Turkey was indeed under dark clouds in 1997. The military was fighting
    against the separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party, a vicious group that
    specialized in murdering its civilian opponents. The military's tactics
    trampled upon the human rights and dignity of Kurds in the country's
    southeast, and the overall national climate served to suppress any
    expression of Kurdish identity. The war cost Turkey more than 30,000
    lives, and hundreds of thousands became refugees in their own land.

    When Kemal won his award, human rights violations were rampant and
    freedom of expression was severely restricted. The European Union's
    refusal in that year to extend candidate member status to Turkey
    froze relations with Ankara. The Union had no influence on Turkey
    and its pull was weak.

    Since then, not only has the war ended, but the EU has also reversed
    its course. Turkey has made huge strides to fulfill the economic
    and political conditions necessary to join the Union because the
    Turkish public overwhelmingly support this goal. The movement toward
    democratic governance and liberal politics has certainly encountered
    great resistance at every turn. Yet in the end, the democratizing
    will of Turkish society has prevailed; despite stiff opposition from
    some powerful entrenched interests, groundbreaking reforms have been
    undertaken. Last December, the European Council decided to start
    accession talks with Turkey on Oct. 3 of this year, a decision
    that many in the Union and in Turkey still find hard to digest,
    or outright unacceptable.

    So the indictment against Pamuk, however offensive, ought to be seen as
    part of the ongoing struggle within Turkey about the country's future,
    particularly within the justice system. Some judiciary members have
    been slow to adjust to contemporary legal norms. But judicial opinion
    increasingly reflects the sophistication and outlook of a new attitude
    toward the law and citizens' rights.

    Detractors of Turkey's European destiny must have rejoiced in Pamuk's
    indictment. Yet they themselves have been displaying a non-European
    spirit toward Turkey, with their rejection of Turks on cultural
    (read religious) grounds and their petty maneuvering over commitments
    already made. As such they are the Turkish hard-liners' best allies.

    Turks not unlike Kemal and Pamuk have spent over two centuries in
    their country's European vocation, often fighting on two fronts. That
    is why it took them so long to get to where they are. But at the end
    of the day, they have always prevailed.

    *

    Soli Ozel is a professor of international relations at Istanbul Bilgi
    University and a columnist for the Turkish daily newspaper Sabah.
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