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Misbehaving in the waiting room

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  • Misbehaving in the waiting room

    Kathimerini, Greece
    Sept 24 2005

    Misbehaving in the waiting room
    The legal case against novelist Orhan Pamuk and the court decision
    halting an academic conference dealing with the massacre of Armenians
    under the Ottoman Empire (which will go ahead nevertheless),
    organized by three Turkish universities, suggest that the Armenian
    genocide is more than just a taboo in the neighboring country.

    Pamuk's prosecution and the conference ban are not isolated incidents
    that can be attributed to the excessive zeal of specific judges.
    Rather, they seem to fit a more systematic pattern. The Turkish
    political establishment has a long tradition of using courts to lend
    repression a veneer of legitimacy. Freedom of historical research is
    one of the victims of this repression.

    Interestingly, the freedom of expression violations took place on the
    eve of Ankara's talks with the European Union - and despite growing
    skepticism over Turkish ambitions. In a clear sign of Ankara's warped
    mentality, the awkward juncture facing Turkey was not enough to stop
    the establishment from provoking democratic sentiment on the
    continent.

    The question is how can a country like Turkey begin accession
    negotiations in 10 days? Ankara went through many different stages
    before making its way into the EU's waiting room. It signed a customs
    union agreement with Brussels, it won candidate status, and, at the
    summit meeting last December, it finally got a date for the launching
    of EU membership talks.

    Even if we accept that Turkey's cultural identity should not be an
    obstacle to joining the European home, there are still doubts about
    the extent to which it has met the formal conditions for membership.
    Has Ankara really passed all the previous stages after fulfilling all
    the necessary requirements? Not quite. The truth is that American
    pressure made sure Brussels lowered the bar for Turkey when
    necessary.

    Now Europe has to pay the price. Many Europeans are shocked at the
    consequences. The truth is that Ankara never tried to blanket its
    human rights violations, its torture practices and its awkward policy
    toward its neighbors. Never did Turkey try to hide its willingness to
    join the EU on its own terms and not as a country that is seeking to
    adapt to the norms and principles of European culture. This is
    Europe's problem, not Turkey's.
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