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ANKARA: `I long for opposition with realizable dreams, not fears'

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  • ANKARA: `I long for opposition with realizable dreams, not fears'

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 25 2008


    `I long for opposition with realizable dreams, not fears'


    Politician Murat Mercan has apparently given considerable thought to
    what he would nowadays do if he was a member of the main opposition
    Republican People's Party (CHP) instead of the ruling Justice and
    Development Party (AK Party).


    He has eventually reached an answer which he shared in an interview
    with Sunday's Zaman this week; he would like to see an effectively
    active opposition party pushing the ruling party to make more
    progressive reforms within the country's European Union membership
    process. The modernization project is a goal of the Turkish state, he
    notes, and should not be limited to a particular party. Mercan, a
    founding member of the AK Party, is currently head of Parliament's
    Foreign Affairs Commission. During the previous parliament, he led the
    delegation representing Turkey at the Council of Europe Parliamentary
    Assembly (PACE).

    Regarding the issue of reactions, particularly those from opposition
    parties, to statements by officials from international bodies, most
    notably the European Union, concerning an ongoing closure case against
    the ruling party, he said: "I have long given thought to what I would
    do if I was instead [a member] of the CHP; that's possible, we may
    well be in opposition one day, that's a necessity of democracy. I
    would definitely work to be more influential for encouraging the AK
    Party to act more progressively concerning Turkey's EU membership
    process. Because this modernization project is truly a project of the
    state. These are not projects that could be appropriated or
    personalized by Ahmet, Mehmet or the AK Party. Our people appreciate
    who has made the biggest contribution to this process, and the 47
    percent of the vote gained in the July 22 elections by our government
    was basically about the realization of certain expectations by our
    party," Mercan said.

    "In other words, I would prefer to produce realizable dreams for the
    future instead of creating fears, if I were in the CHP's
    situation. However, the CHP is unfortunately creating fears stemming
    from the past instead of hopes for the future, and I don't believe
    that this is a sustainable way of making politics. Perhaps the CHP
    could do much better than we have done, why not?" he continued.

    In late March, Turkey's Constitutional Court decided unanimously to
    hear an appeal from a top prosecutor to close Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip ErdoÄ?an's AK Party on charges that it had become a
    "focal point for anti-secular activity." The prosecutor has also
    sought a five-year ban from party politics for 71 politicians,
    including ErdoÄ?an and former AK Party member President Abdullah
    Gül.

    >From the outset, a number of international bodies and foreign
    politicians have criticized the case, urging respect for the rule of
    law and European standards. This criticism was too much for some, who
    suggested that it amounted to interference in domestic affairs and was
    thus disrespectful vis-à-vis Turkey's national sovereignty and
    independence.

    "We have to be consistent within ourselves: Turkey has not displayed
    the will to become an EU member due to external pressure, and when
    this will was first displayed back in the 1960s, the AK Party didn't
    even exist," Mercan said, in an apparent reference to the fact that
    the relationship between Ankara and Brussels dates back to 1963, when
    the Ankara Agreement was signed between Turkey and the then-European
    Economic Community (EEC).

    "Following the first application, this will was reaffirmed several
    times, most recently during the EU summit in Helsinki in 1999, when
    there was a coalition government in power which represented almost all
    the political actors of today," he said. Turkey was given EU candidate
    country status at the Helsinki summit in December 1999, when it was
    also noted that it would be required to meet the same conditions for
    accession as other countries.

    Turkey started an expansive reform process after the summit in order
    to meet the EU criteria and has been continuing this process ever
    since. The then-coalition government under Prime Minister
    Bülent Ecevit abolished the death penalty in 2002 as a historic
    step toward the EU. The Copenhagen summit on Dec. 12-13, 2002, also
    moved Turkey closer to the EU. The council finally decided that
    negotiations would start without delay if Turkey met the Copenhagen
    political criteria by the December 2004 summit.

    "The EU is basically a coordination mechanism and has certain
    conditions; one cannot demand to be treated according to one's own
    specific conditions. One either accepts these conditions or not; and
    if one accepts, later one becomes a member. But if these certain
    conditions change in time; one can say that he does not accept these
    new conditions and depart from the bloc," Mercan said. "But displaying
    the will to become a member and at the same time criticizing constant
    conditions is a contradiction."

    "It is natural for one to be annoyed with the criticism from
    international bodies; there is also some criticism with which I'm
    annoyed. For example I'm uneasy with some particular styles or, for
    example, with some unfair rebukes by the EU concerning the so-called
    Armenian genocide. But what I say at this point is this: You may be
    annoyed with certain things, you may not agree with these things --
    then there are two things to do, either you persuade your counterpart
    by displaying that his view is incorrect, or you reach a point where
    you say I'm out of this."

    Nowadays, there is one thing concerning the CHP that pleased Mercan:
    news reports concerning the CHP's plans to open a representative
    bureau in Brussels. "All of us should work for the rightful perception
    and a true image of Turkey. There is a need for the opposition's
    contributions as much as there is a need for those of the governing
    party within the EU process. Their contribution is extremely important
    for the creation of dialogue and for image. If one is unhappy about
    the EU's stance, what one must do is obvious, as long as there is
    sincerity in this uneasiness: It is opening dialogue, there is no
    other healthy way."

    25 May 2008, Sunday
    EMÄ°NE KART / KERÄ°M BALCI ANKARA
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