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Lawyer Who's Taking On The EU (And Anyone Who Insults Turkey)

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  • Lawyer Who's Taking On The EU (And Anyone Who Insults Turkey)

    LAWYER WHO'S TAKING ON THE EU (AND ANYONE WHO INSULTS TURKEY)
    Benjamin Harvey In Istanbul

    Scotsman, United Kingdom
    Aug 6 2006

    KEMAL Kerincsiz believes Turkey is one of the greatest, most free
    countries in the world.

    But insult it, and you could find yourself facing him in court.

    To some of Turkey's 70 million people, the ultra-nationalist lawyer
    is the voice of a proud people against a patronising West. To others,
    he is the voice of intolerance - a major embarrassment that could
    derail Turkey's bid to join the European Union.

    As the ubiquitous, mustachioed leader of the Turkish Lawyers' Union,
    Mr Kerincsiz is the reason writers and intellectuals are regularly
    put on trial in Turkey.

    Mr Kerincsiz gained international notoriety this year for dragging
    the celebrated novelist Orhan Pamuk to court for allegedly insulting
    Turkishness. Mr Pamuk, often cited as a candidate for the Nobel prize
    in literature, was acquitted.

    But the lawyer has met with success in less high-profile cases, winning
    a conviction against an Armenian-Turkish journalist for the same
    offence. He has also opened dozens of other cases against journalists,
    writers and intellectuals, including one set to go to court this
    month against the Arizona-based Turkish novelist Elif Shafak.

    Mr Kerincsiz and his organisation of some 700 nationalist lawyers
    have exasperated not only EU officials - who have said the cases must
    be stopped or Turkey will jeopardise its hopes of joining the EU -
    but also Turkey's intellectuals and its leadership.

    The lawyer believes Turkey's future is in the East and represents
    a growing, powerful faction of Turkish society tired of being told
    it must aspire to be more like the West. Recently, his view appears
    to be gaining traction in the government, with Recep Tayyip Egdoga,
    the prime minister, increasingly making foreign policy overtures to
    the Middle East - and away from Europe.

    "The easterner has to insult himself and degrade his own culture to
    ingratiate himself with the West," Mr Kerincsiz said. "Our place is
    in eastern culture, our real aim is finding allies among our own
    people." By that he means primarily the Turkic peoples of Central
    Asia, which he hopes to see included one day in the "Turkish Union"
    led by Turkey.

    He admits this is a far-off dream, but it is possible, he says,
    especially when one looks at the mishmash of different cultures
    joined together in the EU. Mr Kerincsiz makes no effort to hide his
    view that the European Union is an enemy of Turkey.

    In the year that has followed Turkey's opening of EU negotiations
    last October, it has become clear that even if they don't entirely
    share Mr Kerincsiz's view, Turks are cooling in their enthusiasm for
    accession, and he is tapping into the sources of their discontent.

    The latest "Eurobarometer" survey found only 44 per cent of Turks
    surveyed thought EU membership would be a good thing for Turkey,
    compared to 55 per cent last autumn. Last spring, 66 per cent said
    they supported EU membership.
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