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ANKARA: Greeks, Turks: All in the language

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  • ANKARA: Greeks, Turks: All in the language

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    May 26 2006

    Greeks, Turks: All in the language
    Yavuz Baydar

    [email protected] May 2006


    Bad news is that incident over the Aegean brought death and sorrow.
    It brought massive material loss. But still, the fact that the crisis
    has been toned down very wisely by the leaderships in Ankara and
    Athens, is giving hope for the future.
    Another good news is that we, some 100 Turkish and Greek journalists,
    will meet in Istanbul, June 9-11, to continue to discuss ways to
    create a common ground to disperse hatred, fear and misunderstanding
    amongst our peoples, with the participation of the new Greek Foreign
    Minister, Dora Bakoyannis.
    Whenever crisis occur - or reemerge - between these two neighbours,
    (and there were many of them) old emotions flare up. History itches
    in the memory. A lot of people can not help feel pessimistic. Will
    this friction never end? they ask.
    They might be right. There are many problems that remain unsolved. On
    the official level, that is. But, once you start looking into the
    civilian layers of the perceptions, you see a more hopeful picture.
    Greeks, belonging to a smaller country - in terms of population and
    size - feel fear, in general.
    Turks, mostly indifferent to issues like Cyprus, Aegean, air space
    etc because they have much higher priorities as unemployment,
    poverty, violence in the agenda - feel in the end of the day,
    perhaps, mistrust.
    Greeks can not understand why Turks have not Greco-Turkish relations
    so high up in the agenda, and most Turks can not comprehend why
    Greeks blow things up `out of proportion' and make a fuss every time
    something happens.
    Simply put, it is like that. Thie type of frame of mind is common in
    conflicted regions and they are actually not impossible to overcome.
    But, we have a serious problem, commonly shared by two countries:
    How the media covers developments, matters and issues, that have to
    do with the relations between Greece and Turkey. Media has been THE
    problem for some time now, and, as the latest incident proved, it
    still is.
    As a keen observer of the media landscape, I will suggest that,
    although Turkish media has been jointly responsible in escalations of
    tension in some earlier cases, this time it was the Greek media's
    turn the heat up, with some papers venting fury to the point of
    provocation. Meanwhile, as I noted in an interview with the Greek TV
    channel Alpha, Turkish press toned it down, treating the story very
    calmly, with very few, careful comments in the mainstream.
    We know that in conflicts between neighbours, dose of nationalism
    plays a crucial role, squeezing the governments into a corner. Both
    Greece and Turkey have been known for their staunch nationalism, and
    the media plays a key part either for moderation or confrontation.
    Nationalism is particularly present in some Greek media outlets, and,
    I will claim, it is more apparent than in Turkish press, which shows
    these tendencies almost only when violence related to Kurdish
    separatism escalates.
    It is not only that the Greek media almost always chooses to act
    hawkishly when incidents as dogfights take place.
    Take the minority coverage. Greek media has very little minority
    coverage, if any, of the Turkish-Muslim minority in Western Thrace,
    or others. When a female candidate for the elections as governor for
    Xanthi - a historic settlement of the Turkish Muslim Minority in
    Northeastern Greece - gave an interview for a Turkish daily recently,
    it occupied the Greek press for days whether she had uttered the word
    `turkish' (as part of her identity) or not!
    While the Turkish press once upon a time was criticised and ridiculed
    for not using `Kurdish' as a word to identify a person who speaks
    Kurdish and calls himself/herself `Kurd', Greek press, unfortunately,
    still seems to defy EU standards of respecting individual and group
    rights! In Turkey, if a person identifes herself as Armenian or
    Alawite he/she is allowed and mentioned in the press as such; but in
    Greece, large segments of press refrains systematically from using
    `Turkish' when referring to its minority. Sadly, although some
    130.000 people in Greece speak Turkish and feel `Turkish', this is a
    taboo in Greek press. From the EU point of view, this is utterly
    remarkable.
    I do make many exceptions amongst the papers and colleagues, of
    course. My point is, as a journalist sincerely eager for a better and
    bright future for our children in Greece and in Turkey, to give some
    food for thought to my colleagues. There are professional ways to be
    much less high-strung, more `easy' on these matters. Press should not
    follow the `official discourse', it must lead in its `civilian' way,
    with a bold, lucid, courageous language.
    Yes, the language.
    Many of our common problems are there, waiting to be solved.
    You may have read one Greek reader's letter to Ilnur Cevik. In that
    letter I was perplexed by the `official' tone that came from a
    civilian.
    When I was interviewed by Alpha TV - I do not know how much of it was
    aired - I said the following: `When you play a deadly game
    delibarately, you know the probabilities of death. Most unfortunate
    is that a human being died, his family suffering for a stupidity.
    Milliaosn of dollars went down tghe drain for nothing. For what? For
    two male cats trying to mark their territory! Why do we not think
    about our children, their children? Why can we not imagine, that
    maybe year 2020 the entire Aegean will be without borders? Why do we
    not think that the EU process will solve, whether the parts want it
    or not, all the problems?'
    Now, let me take an article by Stavros Lygeros, in Kathimerini, to
    reach a conclusion. There, again, I am struck by the
    confrontatioanlistic rhetoric, `you are the bad one, not us' type of
    argumentation.
    I will try to respond to him, below each paragraph.
    Lygeros writes:
    `Ten years after Prime Minister Costas Simitis declared his intention
    to improve ties with Turkey, it is unclear what progress has been
    made and what prospects exist. Turkey never loses an opportunity to
    stress - in words and deeds - that its expansionist goals remain
    unchanged. Even when Ankara needed Greek and Cypriot approval in
    order to embark on accession talks with the European Union, it not
    only failed to show any good will but intensified its provocations.
    The Turks have never hidden their intentions. After the EU approved
    the launch of talks, Ankara said it would not change its stances on
    Cyprus and the Aegean..'
    My note:
    There is a remarkable progress that has been made, for those who want
    to see. Latest project on the pipeline through Thrace is one;
    purchase of a large Turkish bank by a Greek bank is another. Exchange
    of students are very successful and contacts between the
    municipalities increase. These sort of developments are helping a
    gradual but continous change. More will follow.
    `Expansionist' is an old fashioned rhetoric. In the EU context -
    Greece is a member, Turkey is a negotiating partner - this definition
    has no meaning. You can not `expand' violently, as you negotiate an
    EU membership. Therefore, `Turks' can have, logically, no such
    `hidden' intentions. NATO and Athens also confirmed that the incident
    in the Aegean was not a `provocation'.
    As for Cyprus, I believe we have more questions to Papadopoulos,
    President of Cyprus, and to the Greekcypriot voters, than to Erdogan.
    No to Annan plan, yes to `No solution' and massive `no' amongst the
    Greekcypriot youth to living together with Turkcypriots (around 70 %)
    do not help much to encourage Turks to `change their stance', do
    they?
    Lygeros writes:
    `Tuesday's collision in the Aegean was statistically predictable. But
    it also brings back to the fore the hostility of Turkey's
    expansionism in the Aegean. Athens has been pursuing an approach of
    `detente' with Ankara but this cannot be a substitute for policy. If
    relations are to be improved, there must be good will on both sides.
    But all evidence shows that Ankara's provocations and coercive
    diplomacy will not disappear. Good relations would benefit both
    countries, not just ours. This should be self-evident, but
    unfortunately is not.'
    My note: Again, we meet terms like `expansionism', and
    `provocations'. The author claims that `all evidence shows that
    Ankara's provocations and coercive diplomacy will not disappear..'
    What evidence? We do not know. He is right that good-will is required
    from both sides. But good-will has a lot to do with the way one
    analyses the developments.
    Lygeros writes:
    `Certain commentators maintain that Greece could achieve a detente by
    indirectly yielding to Turkish demands and making some apparently
    painless concessions. But this stance assumes the existence of
    unequal terms in Greek-Turkish relations and will only serve to
    intensify Turkish hostility.'
    My note: The end paragraph of the opinion article in Kathimerini is
    actually highlighting the point I am trying to make: that without a
    basic knowledge of conflict resolution, the confrontation will
    continue even in press. Naturally, this sort of argumentation has its
    twin in Turkish press, reflected from time to time, whenever tension
    is visible.
    But, this is not the way. The more we, as journalists both in Greece
    and Turkey, realize, in sincerity, that the EU process, however
    painful and bumpy it may be, is possibly the most effective tool to
    neutralize all sorts of ill intentions and vicious plans.
    The sooner we see it, the better.
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