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Agenda Gone Wild Due To Failure To Normalize

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  • Agenda Gone Wild Due To Failure To Normalize

    AGENDA GONE WILD DUE TO FAILURE TO NORMALIZE

    Today's Zaman
    April 20 2009
    Turkey

    We live in a country where the national agenda changes with dizzying
    speed. Some say that the rapid change of agenda items is attributable
    to years of unresolved problems. Some nurture the hope of moving
    toward the settlement of established problems.

    When senior officials of political parties are asked the reasons why
    problems can or cannot be solved, irrespective of party affiliations,
    they all focus on Turkey's need for normalization. Turkey is a country
    that has been longing for normalization since its establishment.

    It is not only local arguments, but also external factors that are
    voiced in the backstage corridors of Ankara in connection with the
    country's failure to normalize. Some comment that in a shrinking world,
    it is assumed normalization and increased welfare will have global
    effects, an assumption that may be perceived as unfavorable. This paves
    the way for developments that might be disappointing to societies'
    desire for normalization.

    Does normalization have a unique geography?

    According to a political pundit, Turkey's current position makes
    it considerably difficult for it to normalize, as do its special
    conditions.

    After the local elections and Obama's visit, Turkey has spent the
    last week feeling exhausted by the rapidly changing agenda: The
    12th wave of operations in the Ergenekon investigation; the tension
    between Azerbaijan concerning the reopening of the border crossing
    with Armenia; the speech delivered by the chief of general staff;
    the police raid against the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militants
    within the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP); and the ever
    worsening economic crisis.

    There is not a single move toward the settlement of any of these
    issues by the political parties.

    Senior officials of the main opposition Republican People's Party
    (CHP) and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) stress that the
    government and the opposition must act together for the common good
    of the country and are considerably uneasy about the inability of
    politics to create solutions.

    In informal conservations, they openly admit that they, too, have their
    faults, but they put the eventual blame on the ruling party. While
    they enjoy the fact that this process is weakening the ruling Justice
    and Development Party (AK Party), they feel the need to stress that
    the nation is paying the price for the lack of solutions.

    Conversely, senior AK Party officials claim that it is the opposition
    that is responsible for the lack of solutions. Referring to the results
    of the recent election, they said: "If any of the opposition parties
    had been part of the solution, the nation would have told them to be
    ready to assume government office. But the reality is that only the
    sum of all them can match the votes of the AK Party."

    The silence adopted by the opposition parties particularly after
    the speech delivered by Chief of General Staff Gen. Ilker Basbug,
    has been criticized. Senior CHP and MHP executives say that they
    find it difficult to understand Basbug's speech, which has been
    both criticized and praised, and that they are working on it and will
    act accordingly.

    Meanwhile, Parliament Speaker Kiksal Toptan is being harshly
    criticized and viewed as a discredited politician who avoids taking
    responsibilities. After having failed to take the initiative in
    constitutional amendments and reforms, having initiated a discussion
    about the tenure of president and making statements about the Ergenekon
    detentions, Toptan is seen as effectively putting an end to his career
    as a politician.

    Turkey's problems with such a quickly changing agenda mean it cannot
    return to its original agenda and this is the biggest obstacle
    to normalization. However, politicians have not given up hope; as a
    senior CHP executive said: "Do not be demoralized or disappointed. Our
    country is capable of overcoming these problems." Facing the problems
    is part of the solution so it would be wrong to despair.

    Latest Ergenekon operation is forerunner of operations against
    politicians

    In its 12th wave of operations, the Ergenekon investigation was
    extended to university rectors and nongovernmental organizations
    (NGOs), which came as a shock to some politicians. Those who have
    argued that the Ergenekon investigation was being conducted under the
    control of the AK Party and would end without causing much disruption,
    now confess they were wrong.

    Stressing that the reactions to the 12th wave were louder than those to
    the 11th, a doyen of politics said: "The 12th wave is the forerunner
    of the political wave. If it had been controlled by the AK Party,
    there would have been no 12th wave. Now that it has reached this stage,
    it will also extend to politics."

    Senior AK Party officials confirmed that they have lost some political
    support because of the last wave. "If we could control it, we would
    not allow developments that would weaken us. The legal process is
    proceeding in its natural course," they said.

    CHP deputy Chairman Onur Oymen pointed out that while the
    detention, search, interrogation and arrest stages are being
    conducted in compliance with the law, they disturb to people's
    consciences. Referring to the medical condition of the Support for
    Modern Life Association (CYDD) President Turkan Saylan, he cautioned
    that "practices that may distress people should be avoided." While
    Parliament Speaker Toptan made a similar statement, the Turkish
    Industrialists and Businessmen's Association (TUSIAD) and some NGOs
    were harsher in their reactions.

    CHP leader Deniz Baykal, who seemed to give the impression of
    renouncing his advocacy for Ergenekon during the election process,
    defined the 12th wave as a "coup." Baykal sent senior party officials
    to the places where searches and detentions were being been undertaken,
    claiming that the AK Party had conducted a coup through the agency
    of prosecutors. "While respected people are being detained, no one
    lifts a finger," he said, emphasizing the lack of reaction.

    In response to Baykal's words which are beyond the limits of ordinary
    criticism, senior AK Party members argued that he may be "panicked
    due to ever-narrowing circle around him." They further accused him of
    having double standards. "When a closure case was brought against the
    ruling party, he said, 'There are prosecutors in Ankara,' hoping for
    the AK Party's closure, but he described the 12th wave of Ergenekon
    as a 'prosecutors' coup.' Isn't it a contradiction?" they asked.
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