Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Positive Signs from Turkey?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Positive Signs from Turkey?

    Spiegel Online, Germany
    Sept 22 2006


    Positive Signs from Turkey?

    Turkish author Elif Shafak was acquitted on Thursday by an Istanbul
    court on charges of "insulting Turkishness." A good move given that a
    progress report on Turkey's readiness to join the EU is due out soon.



    AP
    Turkish author Elif Shafak was acquitted on charges of "insulting
    Turkishness" on Thursday.
    The charge is not one you'd see in most European Union countries:
    "Insulting Turkishness," it is called. But that's what Turkish
    novelist Elif Shafak, one of the EU aspirant's most popular writers,
    had been charged with. On Thursday, though, an Istanbul court
    acquitted Shafak following a one-and-a-half hour session, concluding
    that she had committed no crime.

    The case had drawn a lot of attention from the EU and has highlighted
    Turkey's difficult road to membership. The 25-member club, which
    appears set to accept Romania and Bulgaria in January, has repeatedly
    criticized elements of Turkish law such as the one that provided the
    basis for the charges against Shafek. A report on Turkey's progress
    toward joining the EU will be presented in mid-October.

    While Turkish nationalists protesting outside the court building had
    to be contained by riot police after the verdict was announced, many
    in Turkey have expressed relief over the verdict. "We want a country
    where people are not interrogated because of their novels," said Muge
    Sokmen, Shafak's publisher, according to the Associated Press. The AP
    also quotes Shafak's husband Eyup Can as saying that the trial is "a
    shame not just for her but for Turkey."

    Even if the trial did not receive much coverage in the German press,
    the verdict had a few of Friday's commentators heading for their
    keyboards. An editorial in the center-left daily Berliner Zeitung
    notes with satisfaction that "the court in Istanbul needed only a few
    minutes to acquit the Turkish writer Elif Shafak," stressing that the
    trial was "absurd" in so far as the accusations were not based on
    statements made by Shafak "in essays or on discussion panels," but
    rather on words uttered by the protagonist in her new novel. "It's a
    good sign that the court reached a decision so quickly," the
    commentator notes. She immediately adds, however, that Turkey
    shouldn't get too smug: What is ultimately needed is for the Turkish
    government to eliminate the law that made the trial possible in the
    first place. The law in question, paragraph 301 of the Turkish penal
    code, has a history of being used to silence debate over "Turkey's
    attempted extermination of the Armenians" during the years before the
    First World War, the commentator points out. Such legally sanctioned
    censorship is incompatible with EU membership. "The European Union
    has rightly demanded changes to the Turkish penal code," the piece
    concludes.

    The trial against Shafak comes at a time when many Westerners are
    convinced that predominantly Muslim countries are bastions of
    religious fanaticism and intolerance. Notwithstanding the recurring
    calls for a "dialogue with Islam," many seem already to have made up
    their minds that such a dialogue cannot be conducted in a fruitful
    way. This, in any case, is the position of a commentary in Friday's
    center-right daily Die Welt-- one that takes a look back at the
    Muslim outrage over the comments on Islam made by Pope Benedict XVI
    last weekend. The much-invoked "dialogue with Islam," the paper
    writes, is nothing but a "farce." The paper claims that the words "We
    need to show more respect for Islam" have become a catchphrase in the
    West and that this formula is always used when "criticism of Islam
    triggers Islam's violent reflexes." The "feelings" of Muslims -- the
    commentator himself places the word in quotation marks -- are
    "nothing but a modern form of religious dictatorship," the piece
    argues. Islam is compared by the commentator to medieval
    Christianity. "Just as, during the Christian Middle Ages, only church
    members were considered human, orthodox Islam considers no one human
    but those who are Muslim," the paper says. The commentator then
    claims that "strongly religious Muslims" are in fact nothing but
    "mental clones" and victims of "indoctrination." After waxing
    eloquent on Islam's "problematic history" and accusing Muslims of
    "refusing to confront it," he concludes that "we can expect a
    renaissance of religious dictatorship in which every so-called
    prejudice and every putative lack of respect is responded to with
    threats and attacks."


    NEWSLETTER
    Sign up for Spiegel Online's daily newsletter and get the best of Der
    Spiegel's and Spiegel Online's international coverage in your In- Box
    everyday.



    Left-wing daily Die Tageszeitung warns against precisely this kind of
    rhetoric and makes a plea against painting all Muslims with the same
    broad brush. After all, even if there has been a resurgence of faith
    in the Muslim world since September 11, 2001, they're not all
    fundamentalist, the paper writes. "The majority of ... Muslims have
    not discovered a blueprint for bombs in the Koran," the commentator
    writes, "but rather a manual on how to lead a better life." Many
    young Muslims have found ways of reconciling their religion with
    Western popular culture. Instead of treating "reborn Muslims" as if
    they were all bigots and potential terrorists, Europeans need to
    understand that "the struggle is not one between religious faith and
    the tradition of the Western Enlightenment, but one between
    terrorists and their enemies."

    -- Max Henninger, 12:30 p.m., CET



    ------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------


    Hungarian Unrest Raises Questions About The EU's Future

    An estimated 10,000 people gathered outside the Hungarian parliament
    on Thursday in what became the fifth consecutive night of protests
    prompted by Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany's admission that he had
    lied to voters about the catastrophic state of the Hungarian economy.
    The protests followed the example of those on Wednesday night by
    being largely peaceful. The chaos and street battles witnessed in
    Budapest earlier in the week appear to have died down for good.

    But aside from the civil unrest it has prompted in Hungary,
    Gyurcsany's admission that he "lied morning, evening and night" also
    raises questions about the pressures that European Union membership
    entails for new member states from Eastern Europe. Hungary was one of
    10 states to join the EU on May 1, 2004 -- two more Eastern European
    countries, Bulgaria and Romania, look set to join the club in a
    little over three months. A number of commentators are scratching
    their heads about Europe's future as a result.

    "Budapest is burning," the center-left daily Suddeutsche Zeitung
    observes, adding that "these flames are not just a symbol of public
    outrage -- the unrest also shows that the road ahead for the EU's
    prospective member states is more painful than expected." In other
    words, similar scenes are to be expected in Bulgaria and Romania:
    "The expansion of the EU will lead to further crises. That's why it
    would be a good idea not to force the entry of Bulgaria and Romania
    into the EU," the paper says. In the 1990s, the paper recalls, the
    idea was that new members would reform themselves under EU
    supervision -- "a risky game," the commentator insists. A tough love
    approach might be better. Indeed, the paper calls for "applying
    especially strict standards to Bulgaria and Romania," forcing them to
    battle their problems of "corruption and organized crime" by
    "tightening the thumbscrews." Such a policy may seem harsh, and
    "Bulgarians and Rumanians may find it unfair," but the EU has "no
    other choice," the paper concludes.

    -- Max Henninger, 14:10 p.m., CET
    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X