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  • Evolving Into A Society Tolerant Of Dissenting Views Will Take Time

    EVOLVING INTO A SOCIETY TOLERANT OF DISSENTING VIEWS WILL TAKE TIME IN TURKEY
    by Harry Sterling, Freelance

    Edmonton Journal (Alberta)
    October 24, 2006 Tuesday
    Final Edition

    Novel for dissident writer may focus world attention, and help this
    process along

    OTTAWA -- His own government was determined to imprison him for
    denigrating his country.

    Paradoxically, this month he found himself the recipient of the much
    coveted Nobel Prize for Literature.

    It's an honour which some in Turkey clearly would rather ignore,
    regarding Turkey's internationally respected author, Orhan Pamuk, as
    almost a traitor for daring to publicly refer to claims 1.5 million
    Armenians living in Ottomon Turkey were victims of genocide carried out
    by the Turks during the First World War, and for also criticizing the
    denial of fundamental human rights to Turkey's large Kurdish minority.

    While many would agree that Orhan Pamuk richly deserved the Nobel
    Prize for his many memorable novels and works of non-fiction,
    as exemplified by My Name is Red, Istanbul, and Snow, his selection
    this year may have been based as much on his determination to express
    his right to freedom of speech as on his writings, notwithstanding
    their obvious merits. However, that commitment to speak the truth
    was not appreciated by everyone in his homeland, particularly not
    Islamists and ultra-nationalists who regard his references to the
    massive deaths of Armenians nine decades ago and the oppression of
    Kurdish human rights as deliberate slandering of Turkey.

    His critics, including successive Turkish governments, have always
    insisted the large-scale deaths of Armenians during the First World
    War occurred when the then-Ottoman government was trying to put down
    Armenian nationalists aligned with invading Russian forces and was
    not an act of premeditated genocide.

    They also insist the figure of 1.5 million deaths is inflated.

    Feelings against Orhan Pamuk reached a fever pitch after he was
    quoted in a Swiss interview saying few in Turkey were prepared to
    look honestly at what befell the Armenians and Kurds.

    His outspokenness led to his being charged with "insulting
    Turkishness," a crime carrying a sentence of three years in prison.

    Pamuk was subjected to widespread criticism and physical threats.

    It was only after an international outcry and pressure, particularly
    from the European Union -- which Turkey wants to join -- did the
    Turkish authorities drop the charges.

    But Orhan Pamuk's experience was far from unique. It's symptomatic of
    a never-ending struggle by Turkish writers, intellectuals, human rights
    activists, and others, to ensure that freedom of speech and respect for
    other fundamental human rights are fully honoured in Turkey, a goal
    frequently blocked by those who believe western concepts of freedom
    of speech without controls can undermine the sanctity of the state.

    (Under Turkish law, it is forbidden to criticize the nation, the
    president and prime minister, as well as the military.)

    Scores of Turkish writers and journalists are regularly harassed
    or imprisoned for allegedly denigrating the nation. One authoress
    was recently charged with insulting Turkishness because one of her
    characters in a work of fiction was critical of Turkey. As Elif Shafak
    explained when charged with insulting Turkishness in her recent novel,
    "If there's a thief in a novel, it doesn't make the novelist a thief."

    But, as the controversy surrounding Orhan Pamuk made clear, the issue
    of freedom of speech in Turkey is very much about a nation's ability
    to look objectively at its own history and practices.

    Until very recently, the Armenian genocide issue was a taboo subject in
    Turkey. Anyone daring to suggest that Turkey's Armenian subjects were
    victims of possible genocide would find themselves prosecuted in court.

    Similarly, anyone reporting on violence inflicted on Turkey's Kurdish
    population could expect to feel the authorities' wrath. In one bizarre
    case, a Turkish journalist was charged with violating the law because
    he filmed a military tank dragging the body of a dead Kurd.

    Despite the unwillingness of some in Turkey to accept that questioning
    aspects of Turkish life and past history should be tolerated in a
    democratic society, such views are no longer as prevalent or deeply
    felt as previously.

    There are two reasons for this. First, Turkey has been steadily
    evolving into a modern industrial state in recent years. Although the
    Turkish economy has experienced its ups and downs, living standards
    have improved for many Turks, resulting in a better educated population
    no longer as prepared to accept uncritically restrictions on freedom
    of speech and basic human rights.

    Second, the European Union has made it unequivocally clear that
    if Turkey is to stand any realistic chance of joining the EU, they
    must end legal and other restrictions on fundamental human rights,
    including the rights of minorities, such as the Kurds.

    To its credit, the current government of Prime Minister Erdogan has
    implemented several changes improving human rights legislation. It's
    also permitted the use of the Kurdish language in certain schools for
    the first time, along with broadcasts in Kurdish, previously banned.

    These are welcome developments. However, as the recent experience of
    Orhan Pamuk and other Turkish writers and journalists has demonstrated,
    Turkey's evolution into a society tolerant of dissenting views remains
    a work in progress. Hopefully, the honour of having a Turkish Nobel
    laureate could assist that process.

    Harry Sterling, a former diplomat, is an Ottawa-based commentator.

    He served in Turkey.
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