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Trojan Horse: Ankara Influenced Dutch Election Results

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  • Trojan Horse: Ankara Influenced Dutch Election Results

    TROJAN HORSE: ANKARA INFLUENCED DUTCH ELECTION RESULTS

    Brussels Journal, Belgium
    Dec 8 2006

    >From the desk of Paul Belien on Fri, 2006-12-08 15:27

    Yesterday evening, the Dutch television program Nova caused
    considerable embarrassment in the Netherlands by revealing how the
    Turkish government influenced last months' Dutch general elections.

    In an e-mail sent to thousands of ethnic Turks in the Netherlands
    the Turkish Ministry of Religious Affairs called on them to vote for
    Fatma Koser Kaya, a 38-year old woman whose family emigrated to the
    Netherlands when she was six years old. Koser Kaya is a member of the
    leftist "social-liberal" Democrats 66 (D66) party. On 22 November,
    D66 lost three of its previous six seats in Parliament. Koser Kaya,
    however, though only sixth on the list of D66 candidates, was
    elected as one of the party's three parliamentarians thanks to the
    34,564 individual votes she got, possibly as a result of the Turkish
    government's interference.

    Immigrants are known to overwhelmingly vote for candidates of their
    own ethnic group. Since they have often not integrated in the country
    where they have settled their loyalties lie with their countries
    of origin. This has created a situation where the immigrants in
    Western democracies become Trojan horses of foreign nationalism and
    religious fanaticism. This phenomenon became apparent in this year's
    local elections in the Netherlands and in neighbouring Belgium. It
    tipped the balance in favour of parties that put forward immigrant
    candidates. At the same time, however, it worked to the disadvantage
    of indigenous candidates on these parties' lists, causing considerable
    resentment among the latter.

    In an e-mail, sent from a government address in Ankara, the Turks in
    the Netherlands were asked to vote for Koser Kaya. The e-mail was
    sent by Ali Alaybeyoglu, the advisor to Mehmet Aydin, the Turkish
    minister of Religious Affairs. The first paragraph reads:

    "We all realize that no-one can represent Turks better than Turks.

    The Turkish community is threatened by assimilation. If we do not
    unite and vote for a common candidate our position will only worsen
    in future."

    The e-mail lists five reasons why Turks should vote for Koser Kaya.

    The most important one is the fact that D66 does not recognize the
    Turkish genocide of the Armenians in 1915. The four other reasons
    have to do with D66's opposition to the policies of Rita Verdonk,
    the Dutch minister of Integration.

    The Armenian issue became a topic in the Dutch general elections when
    the two leading parties in the country, the Christian-Democrats and
    Labour, refused to put forward candidates of Turkish origin who did
    not accept the party line that there was a genocide of the Armenians
    in 1915. As a reaction Turkish lobby groups initiated a campaign
    to urge Dutch voters of Turkish ancestry to boycott any party that
    labels the 1915 mass killing of Armenians a genocide.

    The e-mail from the Turkish ministry lists the Dutch parties and
    points out why, apart from D66, they are not acceptable to Turks. The
    Christian-Democrats and Labour are excluded because of their position
    on the genocide, the Liberal Party VVD because it "is the party of
    Verdonk and Hirsi Ali," the Animal Rights Party because it considers
    "animals to be more important than Turks," and the Calvinist Party
    because it "is preparing a new crusade."

    Today, the Dutch ministry of Foreign Affairs contacted Ankara about
    the affair. The Turkish Minister of Religious Affairs said he knows
    nothing about an e-mail. Minister Aydin added that if this e-mail
    had indeed been sent he strongly condemns it. "We do not interfere in
    the internal politics of our friends," he said. Aydin's collaborator
    Alaybeyoglu, the man who allegedly sent the e-mail, said that several
    people have access to his e-mail address. According to the Dutch
    ministry the matter is still under investigation.

    http://www.brusselsjournal.com/nod e/1739
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