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ANKARA: A Different Approach?

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  • ANKARA: A Different Approach?

    A DIFFERENT APPROACH?

    Zaman Online
    July 18 2008
    Turkey

    What a difference a few days can make! The closure of the ruling
    Justice and Developmetn Party (AKP) was widely seen as a foregone
    conclusion, but a subtle change of atmosphere is now taking place,
    largely due to the Ergenekon investigation. A more positive outcome
    appears possible, particularly after the Constitutional Court
    rapporteur advised against a ban on the party.

    It is, however, much too early for Turkey to breathe a sigh of
    relief. In the headscarf case, the Constitutional Court had ignored
    its rapporteur's opinion and opted for a harder line.In any case,
    given the tensions of the past few months, the political situation
    cannot be expected to return to its previous state, as if nothing had
    happened, even if the AKP remains in power. In fact, if no change
    resulted from the turmoil, Turkey would have missed an important
    opportunity to strengthen its democratic framework.

    The two court cases under way are causing wide controversy, but by
    opening the very core of the Turkish system to debate they are also
    making way for a major transformation. The inquiry into Ergenekon,
    which is limited in scope, has so far only scratched the surface,
    but as recent history is being re-examined, it is already creating
    popular expectations for more openness, which political parties will be
    challenged to meet.The Ergenekon investigation focuses on the recent
    unlawful activities of a few dozen people, but as a result of the
    inquiry, the entire ideological underpinning of the state is coming
    under scrutiny. Members of underground "deep state" organizations took
    to illegal extremes an authoritarian approach that, in its less radical
    interpretation, still has wide currency across the political spectrum.

    If, as the investigation suggests, the threat of Islamic fundamentalism
    was deliberately exaggerated to create fear in the population, what
    other issues were similarly exploited? The Susurluk investigation
    of more than a decade ago had already alerted public opinion to
    shadowy groups muddying the waters in the Southeast and elsewhere in
    Turkey. Hundreds of unresolved murders in the early '90s targeted
    not Kurdish radicals who were advocating the use of violence,
    but intellectuals and professionals who were advocating peaceful
    dialogue, in the same way that Hrant Dink was trying to address the
    Armenian issue.

    Fear of a state backlash has often hindered reform, but it has also
    provided a convenient shield for politicians to hide behind. During its
    first mandate, the AKP had gone further than any previous government
    in pushing forward a reformist agenda, but it has not entirely freed
    itself from the politics of fear, as illustrated by its reluctance to
    remove Article 301, which curbs freedom of expression, from the Turkish
    Penal Code (TCK). Yet the recent Ergenekon revelations show that the
    actions of self-declared defenders of the nation can in fact be far
    more damaging than any public expression of dissent or criticism.

    After the Constitutional Court issues its ruling on the case against
    AKP, Turkey's rulers will have to make it a priority to build
    consensus and work with civil society on a comprehensive overhaul
    of the Constitution. It is encouraging that initiatives such as the
    Ortak Akil movement are already trying to bring different sections of
    the society together to promote a more democratic framework, but it
    is disappointing that no women figure on the list of intellectuals
    backing the project. If Turkey is truly to build a more inclusive
    political structure, it cannot ignore 50 percent of its population.
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