Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Court ruling could harm Turkey's bid to join EU

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

  • Court ruling could harm Turkey's bid to join EU

    The Irish Times
    September 24, 2005

    Court ruling could harm Turkey's bid to join EU

    Nicholas Birch in Istanbul

    TURKEY: In a decision widely seen as an attempt to sabotage Turkey's
    European Union hopes, an Istanbul court yesterday forced a major
    state university to suspend a three-day conference on the fate of the
    Ottoman Empire's Armenians, for the second time.

    Another university has said it would try to host the event.

    Due to start today, the meeting would have been the first in the
    country's history to question official claims that it was
    inter-ethnic war, not a deliberate state policy of mass murder, that
    led to the deaths of up to one million in 1915.

    The conference had been planned for this May, but was postponed after
    Turkey's justice minister accused organisers of "stabbing the country
    in the back". "If only I had not dispensed with my right to take them
    to trial," Cemil Cicek added.

    Mr Cicek's message was not lost on the judges of Istanbul's 4th
    Administrative Court.

    Late on Thursday they informed Bosporus University the meeting
    represented a potential breach of the peace and gave organisers 30
    days to provide details about participants, speeches and funding,
    information that has been known for months.

    The writ is disingenuous, analysts say, and probably
    unconstitutional.

    Late on Thursday prime minister Tayyip Erdogan angrily described the
    court's decision as "incompatible with democracy, freedom and
    modernity."

    With Turkey looking likely to start EU accession proceedings on
    October 3rd, analysts describe the court's involvement as evidence of
    the depth of opposition to democratisation in bureaucratic and
    judicial circles.

    "It's a copybook example of Turkey's old political ideology", said
    political analyst Dogu Ergil. "Rather than accepting that the state
    serves citizens, some still think everything citizens do must be
    permitted by the state."

    Nowhere is the mentality that national interests supersede individual
    freedoms clearer than in attitudes towards history.

    Outside the gates of Bosporus University on Friday morning a group
    opposed to the conference distributed leaflets describing
    participants as "agents of imperialism . . . working to destroy the
    country's unity."

    "Turkey has the maturity and will to discuss 1915 democratically,"
    said Bedri Baykam, opposition deputy and leader of the Patriotic
    Movement. "Unfortunately, the other side has neither the courage nor
    the brains." Another protester dismisses conference participants as
    agents of the Armenian genocide lobby.

    It is a claim historian Aykut Kansu fiercely denies. His speech, he
    points out, was due to be about Turks who saved Armenians.

    "History in Turkey is too often seen as a matter of public policy,
    adhering to ideology rather than free debate," he says. "The taboo on
    1915 is just an extreme version of that." He knows all about the
    political pressures on Turkish universities.

    In July he was sacked from his history chair at a well-respected
    private university for openly questioning near-hagiographical
    official accounts of Turkey's founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

    The conference decision comes less than a month after another court
    charged Orhan Pamuk, Turkey's best-known novelist, with "slandering
    Turkey's name."

    Pamuk could face up to three years in prison for telling a Swiss
    newspaper this February that "one million Armenians and 30,000 Kurds"
    had been killed in Turkey.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X