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Turkey Makes Little Progress Towards EU Dream

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  • Turkey Makes Little Progress Towards EU Dream

    TURKEY MAKES LITTLE PROGRESS TOWARDS EU DREAM
    By Christopher Wade

    Kuwait Times
    http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?new sid=NDk1NDk3MDM4
    Dec 16 2008
    Kuwait

    As political distractions go, the court case to close down Turkey's
    ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) was up there with the
    biggest. Ever since the Constitutional Court, in a case called by the
    party's political opponents, decided in July not to close down the AKP,
    momentum toward joining the EU seems to have stalled. In September,
    the EU issued its progress report on Turkey's membership bid. For
    supporters of Turkish membership it was depressing reading.

    The report lists in detail the areas where Turkey has failed to move:
    no progress on lifting immunity of parliamentarians; no progress on
    strengthening parliamentary oversight over public expenditure; limited
    progress in the area of anti-corruption; no progress on ensuring
    cultural diversity; and failure to adequately monitor legal changes
    designed to stop torture. "Despite its strong political mandate,
    the government did not put forward a consistent and comprehensive
    program of political reforms," the rep ort said.

    The failures have led to a loss in support from liberal circles,
    who believed that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had
    abandoned his party's roots in Islamic politics and was truly committed
    to pursuing Turkey's bid to join the EU. Whilst the court case was
    cited by pro-government circles as a major reason why reforms had
    slowed down, one hint that the government was ready to junk major
    reforms came separately, when the ruling administration abandoned
    plans to overhaul the 1982 military- impose d constitution to focus
    on legislation allowing women to wear Islamic-style headscarves
    at universities.

    With the help of a far-right party, which vehemently opposed a new
    constitution, the AKP managed to make constitutional changes to allow
    the headscarf to be worn at tertiary institutions. These changes were
    later thrown out by the Constitutional Court, which said they were
    against the principles of secular state. Some point out that the
    government has made reforms to some of the most notorious articles
    of the criminal code, in particular Article 301, which makes it a
    crime to "insult Turkishness or state i nstitutions.

    The article is often used to silence writers. But the reforms
    have merely been window dressing, according to many commentators
    and EU politicians. "They changed Article 301, but then opened 47
    cases," European parliamentarian Joost Lagendijk said in Ankara in
    November. Lagendijk was referring to the fact that it is now up to
    the Justice Minister to personally approve any prosecutions. "The
    prior authorization requirement opens up the possibility that the
    article will become subject to political considerati on," the EU
    progress report said.

    In one case, authorization has been given for charges to be laid
    against a Turkish writer who said that the massacres of Armenians
    during the First World War constituted genocide. For some the
    government's lack of progress shows that the AKP has never really
    believed in Turkey joining the European Union. "The (AKP) duck behind
    the European Union negotiations so that no one can accuse them of
    having Islamist tendencies," said Hasan Unal, a professor at Gazi
    University in Ankaar, who argues that the AKP itse lf does not believe
    in European values and culture.

    They don't believe in the European process, but they have to keep
    it going." Local elections are coming up in March and the AKP
    has high hopes of wrestling victories in some big municipalities
    across Turkey. With polls showing a drop in the public's support
    for Turkey's EU bid, it is doubtful the government will make any big
    moves soon. That does not sit well with Europeans who would like to
    see bolder moves out of Ankara. "The Turkish government does not have
    the luxury of delaying reforms by using the l ocal elections as an
    excuse," said Lagendijk.

    Then there is the world financial crisis that may result in the
    government going slow on reform. "The crisis couldn't have come to
    Turkey at any time worse than this for the AKP," Unal said. One issue
    that has not been debated much in Turkey is the refusal of Turkey
    to recognize EU member Cyprus, nor to allow Cypriot shipping to use
    Turkish ports. The issue has resulted in the EU suspending accession
    talks in eight policy areas and hampers Turkey's efforts to push
    membership talks further.

    There is no prospect of the government budging on the issue until a
    solution is found to the Cyprus problem. Unal says that the government
    would be committing "political suicide" if it allowed Greek Cypriot
    ships into Turkish ports. To use a phrase that was used over and over
    again in the EU's Sepember report, "little progress has been made." The
    question now is whether the government, now seven years old and showing
    increasing signs of tiredness, is ready for a new push in 2009. - dpa
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