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Turkey Struggling With Freedom

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  • Turkey Struggling With Freedom

    TURKEY STRUGGLING WITH FREEDOM
    by Howard Eissenstat

    Mountain Mail Newspaper, CO
    Nov 6 2006

    At first glance it might seem that the Turkish government under Prime
    Minister Tayyip Erdogan, once so determined to join the European
    Union has had a change of heart.

    With an overwhelming majority in Parliament, Erdogan's Justice and
    Development Party pushed through a series of liberalizing reforms
    early in its administration that went far beyond those contemplated by
    previous governments. Taken as a whole, they seemed to promise a new,
    more democratic and pluralistic country.

    In those heady days in 2003 and 2004, it seemed that Turkey was poised
    to achieve its long-term goal of membership in the European Union
    and - given Erdogan's moderate Islamist base - a potential place of
    leadership for reforms within the Muslim world, as well.

    For the past year or two, however, such hopes have seemed increasingly
    Pollyannaish as reforms have stumbled. Most dramatically, a steady
    stream of Turkey's most prominent intellectuals, journalists and
    authors have been brought to trial under infamous "Article 301" of
    the Criminal Code, which makes it a criminal offense, punishable by
    as many as three years in prison, to "denigrate Turkishness." Should
    a citizen be found guilty of doing so while abroad, the time served
    may be increased by one-third.

    The result has been a serious blow to Turkey's reputation. The
    international stature of many of the accused has ensured widespread
    media coverage of the trials and a steady decline in national stature
    abroad.

    For example, Orhan Pamuk, Turkey's most celebrated novelist and
    recipient of the 2006 Nobel Prize for Literature, was brought to trial
    in 2005 for saying "Thirty thousand Kurds and a million Armenians
    were killed in these lands and nobody dares to talk about it." The
    case against Pamuk was eventually dropped, but new cases are brought
    up on a regular basis. No intellectual can write confidently on the
    wide range of issues that considered "hassas konular," or "sensitive
    issues," without the fear of possible prosecution. These issues range
    from the role of minorities in history and society to the rights
    of conscientious objectors. Turkish democratization - and Turkey's
    international reputation - are dying from a thousand small blows.

    In fact, this public embarrassment appears to be part of a concerted
    effort by members of the old elite within the bureaucracy and military
    and their allies to sabotage both the Erdogan government and Turkey's
    European aspirations.

    The liberalization promised by the Erdogan government - and demanded
    by the EU - placed elements of the old elite in a dilemma. Many in
    the bureaucracy - and particularly within the military - believe it
    is their right and duty to shepherd Turkey toward modernization.

    Elected officials are seen as too corrupt, the populace as too ignorant
    and fickle to be trusted with stewardship of the nation.

    When legal limitations are insufficient for maintaining control, a
    murky system of patronage, strong-arm tactics and outright violence
    that the Turks refer to as the "Deep State" can be relied on to keep
    both politicians and ordinary citizens in line. The liberalization
    demanded by the EU and the reforms implemented early on by the Erdogan
    government all seemed to threaten this monopoly on real power.

    Thus early reforms went only half way. Though many were courageous,
    there were significant concessions to the powerful old guard. Since
    then, the enemies of liberalization have been busy, exploiting these
    weaknesses. They play on nationalist sentiment, giving ammunition
    to enemies of Turkey's bid to membership in the EU and making the
    government look far weaker than its strong majority in Parliament
    would suggest.

    Article 301 has become a weapon for Turkey's most retrograde elements:
    a weapon against the government, against Turkey's EU ambitions,
    against further reforms and against the burgeoning civil society.

    If recent media reports are correct, the Erdogan government is
    considering addressing the question of Article 301 again in the near
    future. Government officials need to do so quickly. And this time,
    they need to avoid the half-measures that have burdened them so far.

    This time, they need to cut out, root and branch, the anti-democratic
    language that Article 301 represents.

    Howard Eissenstat teaches Middle Eastern History at Seton Hall
    University in New Jersey and is a Turkey Country Specialist with
    Amnesty International USA. Column distributed by MinutemanMedia.org.

    http://www.themountainmail.co m/main.asp?SectionID=7&SubSectionID=7&Arti cleID=9423
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