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  • National Identity Crisis In Turkey

    NATIONAL IDENTITY CRISIS IN TURKEY
    by Adrian Morgan

    Spero News
    Nov 2 2006

    The AKP party came into being with one over-riding ethos - to dismantle
    the rule of secularism which kept religion and its outward symbols,
    such as the hiab, or Muslim headscarf, from all aspects of public life

    The current government of Turkey is led by Recep Tayyip Erdogan and
    his Justice and Development (AKP) party, which was amalgamated from
    banned Islamic parties in 2001. When the party came to power after
    the general election of Sunday October 30, 2002, Erdogan, the party
    leader, was not allowed to become prime minister. He had publicly read
    out a pro-Islamic poem in 1998, and as a result had been convicted
    of inciting religious hatred, and this prevented him from holding
    public office.

    As a result, Erdogan's deputy, Abdullah Gul, took the role of
    caretaker prime minister on November 18, 2002. Erdogan did not
    become a member of parliament until early the following year, when
    the Electoral Commission ruled that he was eligible to stand. Erdogan
    won a by-election in Siirt province in the south-east of the country
    on March 9 and two days later he was declared prime minister.

    The AKP party came into being with one over-riding ethos - to dismantle
    the rule of secularism which kept religion and its outward symbols,
    such as the hiab, or Muslim headscarf, from all aspects of public
    life. The military has enforced this secularism to the point of
    staging several coups when a party espousing Islamism became elected
    to power. The AKP has not been subject to a coup, and in the few
    years that it has been in power it has defied the military to take
    Turkish society as far away from its secular foundations as possible.

    Erdogan has made loud noises about the country's accession to the
    European Union, and has made token measures to comply to the conditions
    required to start discussions on joining the EU. On October 3, after
    threatening to pull out of accession talks, Abdullah Gul finally
    arrived in Luxembourg and the first stage of the process of joining
    the EU officially began.

    The behavior of Turkey since that date has shown that there is a
    genuine doubt if Erdogan is really serious about joining the EU. It
    has already been argued by commentators within and without the nation
    that the issue of the EU is being exploited by the AKP to avoid the
    fate of previous openly Islamic governments. While the negotiations
    to be part of the EU continue, there is less chance of a military coup.

    Turkey was officially founded on October 9, 1923, by Mustafa
    Kemal Ataturk. The Ottoman Empire which had previously governed
    the country as an Islamic nation was in ruins, and in March of
    the following year, the Ottoman Caliphate, the last vestige of its
    authority was dissolved. The wearing of the fez was banned, sharia
    laws were abolished in 1926, Arabic script was removed from official
    documents in 1928 and in the same year a clause in the constitution
    that proclaimed Islam to be the national religion was abolished. The
    teaching of Islam to minors was also forbidden.

    Erdogan has juggled with appeasing the EU by introducing token reforms,
    and also trying to remove the official secularism of the nation. His
    party has championed the use of the headscarf by women, and Emine,
    Erdogan's wife, as well as the wives of the AKP leaders, wears the
    hijab as a political statement.

    Today, according to Turkish Press, Erdogan was awarded with the
    "Meritorious Humanitarian Service Medal" by the Turkish Red Crescent.

    This was for his allocating land to the charity's logistic center, and
    for conveying aid following the southern Asia tsunami of December 24,
    2004, and after the Pakistan earthquake of October 8, 2005. The Red
    Crescent states that Turkey helped to collect $21 million in relief.

    While Erdogan may feel pleased with his new medal, it is no antidote
    to the real and impending problems which lie beneath the veneer
    of political stability. In the southeast of Turkey, the Islamic
    heartland where AKP support is highest, there were flash floods
    today, which killed 21 people. A bus traveling from Diyarbakir, the
    largest city in the region, which was carrying guests to a wedding,
    was swept away. With it went the lives of 14 people. In Cinar and
    Bismil, 300 people had to be rescued from their homes. According to
    the Washington Post, dozens are still missing.

    Turkey lies along two major earthquake faults, which traverse the
    length of the country. In 1999, the last major quake claimed the lives
    of 20,000 people. At the weekend, Haluk Eyidogan, head of Turkey's
    National Earthquake Council, was quoted as saying that legislation,
    introduced in 2000 to enforce better inspection and construction of
    buildings, was being bypassed by fraudulent means.

    Eyidogan said that corruption was preventing the effective
    implementation of the ruling. Seismologists are expecting an
    earthquake, of more than 7.0 on the Richter scale, to hit northwestern
    Turkey at any time within the next 30 years.

    The impending earthquake seems a convenient metaphor for the
    underlying tensions in Turkey. While a year ago people in Turkey
    seemed to be mostly in favor of the country joining the EU, there has
    been a dramatic change in attitude. A poll was released on October 4,
    and discussed in the Scotsman and South Africa's Independent Online,
    shows that less than a third of Turkish people (32.2%) feel their
    country should join the European Union.

    The survey was carried out by A&G for the newspaper Millyet, a
    pro-government paper. 2,408 people were polled. In 2004, 67.5% of
    the population thought Turkey should join the EU, and last year 57.4%
    felt that way.

    A poll conducted by the Universities of Isik and Sabanci in Istanbul
    between March and April this year, conducted with 1,846 respondents
    in 22 cities, found that 54% felt that Turkey should join the EU. For
    the figure to drop to 32.2% within only six months (a drop of 21.8%)
    is a sign that the change in opinions has been sudden, and recent.

    M K Bhadrakumar, writing in Asia Times on October 21 suggested that
    Turkey is currently undergoing a "post-modern identity crisis". He
    discussed the issue of the EU, and noted that a recent ruling,
    passed by the French National Assembly has created a wave of anger
    in Turkey. The rule declares that it is now illegal in France to deny
    that there was an "Armenian genocide" in Turkey.

    Nicolas Sarkozy, who is running for president in France next year,
    has said that Turkey should be given no more than "preferential
    partnership" with the EU. It seems that now the Turkish populace
    would perhaps prefer such an arrangement. In October last year, the
    timescale for Turkey to become a full member of the EU was speculated
    at being 20 years. The president of the European Commission, Jose
    Manuel Barroso, recently suggested that it would take 10 to 15 years.

    Barroso said of Turkey's path to EU membership: "Political reforms
    should be continued; freedom of expression and religious rights
    should be fully adopted; the Ankara Protocol should be implemented;
    and, Turkish ports and harbors should be opened to the Greek Cypriots."

    Bhadrakumar stated of the predicament of Turkey: "Turkey should be
    Muslim and secular and democratic as a society, while being only
    secular and democratic as a state. A complicated thought indeed."

    While almost half of the Turkish population (42.2% from the latest
    poll) is undecided about accession to the EU, the news from Europe
    itself is not boding well for the country to join in its current
    state. The UK Independent reveals today that a crucial EU report
    condemns Turkey's human rights record. Finland, which currently holds
    the EU presidency, has demanded emergency talks for this weekend. It
    hopes to push forward the deal on Cyprus, which is still not officially
    recognized by Turkey. In this, the AKP of prime minister Erdogan and
    the military are of one voice - they are adamant that Greek Cyprus
    is recognized.

    Turkey knows that if it cannot clear the Cyprus hurdle by the end of
    next year, it will have the accession process suspended. The document
    on human rights will be officially unveiled next week, but a leak from
    the document claims: "prosecutions and convictions for expression
    of non-violent opinion....are a cause for serious concern." It also
    states that "cases of torture" are still continuing.

    The issue of prosecutions for "expression of non-violent opinion" are
    highly relevant to the current ideological crisis in Turkey. Today,
    a 92-year old archeologist, Muazzez Ilmiye Cig, walked free after
    being prosecuted for "inciting religious hatred". Ms Cig had written
    last year that the hijab, or Muslim headscarf, had been worn 5,000
    years ago by priestesses of Sumer, initiating men into sexual rites of
    passage. The prosecution was a prime example of "freedom of expression"
    being denied.

    The worst aspect of Turkish prosecutions has been the ruling of
    Article 301, which derives from the time of Ataturk. It prohibits
    anyone "who explicitly insults being a Turk, the Republic or Turkish
    Grand National Assembly", on penalty of receiving a three year jail
    sentence. Turkey's Justice Minister, Cemil Cicek has been eager to
    implement this law as a tool to bash champions of free speech.

    As Erdogan is a leader of the National Assembly, along with the
    secular president Ahmet Necdet Sezer, and Cicek has allowed numerous
    prosecutions under Article 301 for individuals who have insulted
    Erdogan. In Europe, it is a tabu NOT to insult and lampoon leaders
    of nations. Various novelists, editors, publishers, visual artists,
    newspapers and cartoonists have been successfully prosecuted under
    Article 301, many for the mere crime of "insulting Erdogan". The
    maximum sentence for breaching Article 301 is a three year jail
    sentence, but most of those convicted receive large fines and suspended
    sentences.

    Another law, Article 288 deprives journalists from the right of
    criticising any trial in action. This law has been applied against
    one journalist, Ms Murat Yetkin for commenting on a trial which had
    not even begun.

    The application of Article 301 is of itself incompatible with the
    standards of freedom of expression which people in Europe expect for
    themselves. Its application has been bizarre. Perlhan Magden was put
    on trial for "insulting Turkishness" when she questioned Turkey's
    obligatory military service.

    Novelists cannot even have their characters state comments which are
    considered "insulting" to Turkish identity without running the risk
    of prosecution. Elif Shafak, in her novel The Bastard of Istanbul had
    some of her Armenian characters refer to the genocides of Armenians
    in 1915 - 1917. For this, she was dragged to court, even though she
    was pregnant. She was finally acquitted on September 22 but could
    not appear to hear the verdict, as she was recovering from a Cesarian
    section. Outside the court, Turkish nationalists protested the verdict.

    The novelist Orhan Pamuk, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for
    Literature on October 12, was also taken to court for his breach of
    Article 301. In February last year, in an interview with a Swiss
    magazine, he mentioned the unmentionable Armenian "genocide". He
    first appeared in court in Istanbul on December 16, and on January 25,
    his case was finally abandoned on a technicality. Again, nationalist
    protesters jostled him both inside and outside the court.

    One woman hit him on the head with a folder.

    In his most celebrated novel, Snow, Pamuk describes the culture rift
    in Turkey, using the example of an Islamic school in the southeast
    of the nation where the tensions between secularist and Islamist
    ideals come into conflict with tragic results. Snow could be seen as
    a metaphor for the current crisis in Turkey.

    The southeast, where there is a large Kurdish community, is still
    wishing for a more traditional Islamic society, as existed during the
    time of the Ottomans. In the northwest, around Istanbul, there is a
    vibrant culture which in many ways is like any other Western society.

    There is a rift between the past and the future, between Islam and
    secularism, progressives and conservatives, between East and West.

    On Sunday, Reuters wrote of the emergence of Islamist groups in the
    southeast, around the region of Diyabakir. The southeast has been
    afflicted for decades by the monsters of Kurdish nationalist violence,
    as enacted by the PKK, and also movements like Turkish Hezbollah,
    which saw hundreds of citizens abducted and tortured to death, their
    sordid demise recorded sadistically on videotape.

    According to local politicians, the new Islamic groups are becoming
    more active, and pose a threat to the secular model upon which Turkey
    is built. The prominence of Erdogan's AKP has allowed extremists and
    fundamentalists to grow more confident with espousing their identity
    as Islamic rather than secular.

    Firat Anli, mayor of a Diyarbakir district said: "In every poor
    neighbourhood, new radical Islamic associations are giving hot food,
    they have meetings at people's homes. They pay for students to go to
    school. I'm very worried...I fear they'll become more powerful and
    could turn to violence like the (Turkish) Hezbollah."

    There will be an election in 2007, and the tensions are rising as
    the date for this approaches. Erdogan is said to be trying to run for
    the post of President, the head of the constitution, as Ahmet Necdet
    Sezer is due to step down. AKP representatives in the southeast state
    that the new Islamic groups are not a threat. They are not a threat
    to the AKP, but they may become a threat to the secular system. The
    military now regards Islamic fundamentalism as a greater threat than
    Kurdish separatists.

    A lawyer from AKP in the southeast said: "Islam is like a tree, it
    has roots which the Kemalists cut away but they are now growing back."

    The issue of religion is such a hot potato, that it has led one leading
    Islamic cleric to state that any criticism of Islam is a threat to
    world peace. The news is reported today by the Associated Press. The
    cleric is Ali Bardakoglu, who was the imam who earlier suggested that
    Pope Benedict XVI's Regensburg address was so inflammatory that the
    pontiff should cancel his planned visit to Turkey. Bardakoglu is head
    of the Religious Affairs Directorate in Turkey.

    Benedict will be visiting Ankara on November 28. Bardakoglu will be
    meeting the Pope. He told a group of mainly African Muslim leaders:
    "We always tell the truth to everyone. People meeting does not mean
    that they approve each other. It could help them express their opinions
    with an open heart and know each other correctly."

    The problems between modernism and fundamentalist values is
    highlighted in the southeast of Turkey by the contentious issue of
    honor killings. On October 27, German news source Die Welt reported
    on the results of a survey, carried out amonst Turkish students,
    found that a third of Turkish students thought honor killing was
    acceptable if a family's "honor" had been violated. In the the Middle
    East University in Ankara, an archaic outlook was the most pronounced
    where 77% of women said a husband had the right to beat his wife for
    reasons such as burnt food.

    The latest case of honor killing happened on October 22, states AFP
    via the Khaleej Times. A 15-year old girl from a mainly Kurdish town
    near the eastern border with Iran, was slaughtered by her brother.

    The girl, Naile, had become pregnant, and had given birth to a baby
    boy. She told her mother that the pregnancy had happened as a result
    of rape. Her brother shot her at point-blank range, in a street in
    the town. The newspaper Vatan stated that the family held a council,
    at which it was decided that the elder brother should be the person
    to carry out the "execution".

    Such killings led in court cases, until last year, to lesser sentences
    than murders, because a person who killed a relative for honour
    was said to have "mitigating circumstances". The rules changed as
    Turkey adapted itself to meet the requirements for joining Europe,
    and there were no longer extenuating circumstances that could reduce
    an honor-killer's sentence.

    As a result, since the end of last year, in eastern towns such as
    Batman and Van, a trend grew of young girls committing suicide. It
    became apparent that in many of these cases, girls who had transgressed
    against family "honor" were pressured to kill themselves, rather than
    have a relative jailed for life.

    On 24 May, Yakin Erturk, the UN special rapporteur on violence against
    women visited the eastern regions and reported that: "The majority
    of women in the provinces visited live lives that are not their own
    but are instead determined by a patriarchal normative order that
    draws its strength from reference to tradition, culture and tribal
    affiliation and often articulates itself on the basis of distorted
    notions of honour."

    "Diverse forms of violence are deliberately used against women who
    are seen to transgress this order. Suicides of women in the region
    occur within such a context.....I have found that the patriarchal
    order and the human rights violations that go along with it - for
    example, forced and early marriages, domestic violence, and denial
    of reproductive rights - are often key contributing factors."

    In June, Ali Bardakoglu announced that the religious affairs department
    was to commission a book called "Mohammed's Message to the Contemporary
    World" which should be in print by next year. The book is especially
    designed to target men in the southeastern Kurdish regions of Turkey,
    where Muslim sexism is strongest and most "honor" crimes take place,
    Bardakoglu announced. He said: "Mohammed did not make any statement
    deprecating women or inciting men to use force against women."

    The battle between the past and the present, sexism and liberation,
    Islam and secularism has, in the months leading up to the next
    election developed a new dimension - the battle between corruption
    and rectitude. Associated Press today reports that Erdogan strongly
    denied allegations that his party has been protecting a massive
    pro-Islamic business which is accused of swindling $1,000,000,000
    from its Turkish workers.

    Many Turks (about 3 milion) live in Germany. It is said that an
    international arrest warrant has been issued in Germany against
    Dursun Uyar, who is head of the Yimpas Group, which was founded in
    1982. Yimpas is a company with diverse output, ranging from clothing
    manufacture to construction.

    Apparently Switzerland also is investigating international fraud on
    the part of the Yimpas group. Uyar cannot be extradited from Turkey,
    due to its constitution, but he could be tried within Turkey.

    Within Turkey itself, the allegations against the Yimpas group are
    being exploited by secular newspapers, such as Hurriyet, and also by
    the secular oppositon party, the Republican People's Party (CHP). at
    the start of the week, the CHP suggested that Erdogan's party took
    money in 2001 for its campaign fund from Yimpas. The pay-off for the
    company was to have 20 of its executives given parliamentary seats.

    According to Kadir Sohret, a former board member of Yimpas, the
    company had gathered $2.5 billion from Turkish worshipers outside
    mosques in Europe before 2001, in the form of investments. This had
    been reported in the daily, Millyet. Pious Muslims, not wishing to
    invest in Western banks, which practiced "usury", were keen to invest
    in a pro-Islamic company.

    On October 30, the deputy leader of CHP, Ahmet Ezrin, asked questions
    in parliament about the offering of AKP party posts to 20 deputies
    from Yimpas, states the New Anatolian.

    He also claimed that some former Yimas administrators and their
    relatives had been elected as mayors and municipal council members
    with the AKP Party. He asked: "Who are the ministers and deputies
    that served as administrators in Yimpas or are relatives of company
    administrators? How many people are there elected as mayor, municipal
    council members or employed in the bureaucracy and that have ties
    to Yimpas?"

    He also asked in parliament if the governor and police chief of Yozgat
    (a city in Eastern Anatolia) had held secret meetings with Dursun Uyar.

    Last week, Hellenic Resources Network reported that there is now
    an apparent "war of attrition" against Erdogan's AKP party, in
    the run-up to the general election, which is expected to happen in
    November next year. A columnist from the New Anatolian, Ilnur Cevik,
    argued that Hurriyet newspaper was mounting the campaign to have
    Dursun Uyar arrested in Turkey. The company he headed, Yimpas, had
    persuaded pro-Islamic masses to invest all their small savings. When
    they lost all their money, other pro-Islamic holding companies also
    got the full force of the anger.

    Duyar had been sentenced to prison and made to pay a large fine. His
    appeal is currently pending. According to Hurriyet, the file on Duyar
    has lain dormant for four years at the court of appeal, and if the case
    is not dealt with in eight months, a statute of limitations will mean
    he can no longer be made to serve his prison sentence. Cevik argues
    that Hurriyet is trying to get the issue to be brought to a head,
    and in the process is using the case to discredit the AKP.

    On October 15, Cumhuriyet reported that the National Security
    Directorate refused to answer questions about the international
    arrest warrant against Duyur. The Directorate claims grounds of
    confidentiality for not responding to questions. It also would not
    say if police are looking for the CEO of Yimpas.

    Recently, Uyar was seen at the funeral of an AKP legislator, in the
    company of several government ministers. The CHP are making the most
    of this, to draw attention to the alleged corruption at the heart of
    AKP. Erdogan is clearly not happy. Today he said: "Not a penny from
    (Yimpas) can be found...It is so ugly. Nobody has the right to launch
    a defamation campaign against the Justice and Development party while
    there is no (Turkish) arrest warrant for that person."

    It seems that Erdogan is currently under pressure. His pro-Islamic
    policies regarding the hijab, or Islamic headscarf, led to a battle
    in the press earlier in the year. The Council of State in Ankara is
    the Turkish equivalent of a Supreme Court, had ruled at the start of
    the year that women who were teachers were not only prevented from
    wearing the hijab in classes, but also were prohibited from wearing
    them while traveling to and from their schools.

    The Islamist and pro-AKP newspaper Vakit carried a photograph of the
    judges who had made the ruling. Above the photograph was the caption
    "Those are the ones who ban the headscarf even on the streets."

    On May 17, a lawyer burst into the Second Chamber of the Council of
    State, and produced a Glock automatic pistol. While shouting out
    "Allahu Ackbar" (Allah is great), he began firing. Five judges
    were hit. One was severely injured but later recovered. Mustafa
    Yucel Ozbilgin was hit in the neck, and died that day in Hacettepe
    University hospital.

    The New Anatolian today reports that an attorney, Omer Lutfu Avsar,
    had alleged that Recep Tayyip Erdogan had solicited the attack on the
    Council of State. The prosecutor's office in Ankara has announced
    that Avsar is to stand trial, on charges of slander under Article
    261/1. If found guilty, the attorney could face four years in jail.

    The funeral of Judge Ozbilgin, which took place at Ankara's Kocatepe
    Mosque in June, saw mourners shouting anti-AKP slogans and making
    government members feel unwelcome.

    Avsar had argued that the prime minister's prior support for
    headscarves, against the constitution, had led to the attack on
    the Council of State. Avsar had tried to have Erdogan prosecuted
    for soliciting the attack, but this was overruled. It was decided
    by the prosecutor's office that Erdogan had legislative immunity
    from prosecution. Ministers can only be put on trial by the Council
    of State.

    The request to have Avsar put on trial was made by Erdogan's attorney,
    and the prosecutor's office has agreed to try the case.

    Adrian Morgan is a British based writer and artist who has written for
    Western Resistance since its inception. He has previously contributed
    to various publications, including the Guardian and New Scientist
    and is a former Fellow of the Royal Anthropological Society.

    http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.a sp?id=6373&t=National+identity+crisis+in+Turke y
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