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ANKARA: Mr. Baykal Goes To Brussels

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  • ANKARA: Mr. Baykal Goes To Brussels

    MR. BAYKAL GOES TO BRUSSELS

    www.worldbulletin.net
    Feb 9 2009
    Turkey

    Deniz Baykal, the leader of the main opposition Republican People's
    Party (CHP), which is panic-stricken and does not know what to do as
    the municipal elections of March 29 near, is now preparing -- after
    his chador and Quran course initiatives, which have been viewed with
    skepticism by voters as moves to attract votes in the local elections
    -- for another initiative, i.e., a European Union initiative. If all
    goes as planned, Baykal will go to Brussels for talks today.

    I must quickly note that Baykal's visit to Brussels, the center where
    EU policies, which serve as an anchor for the improvement of democracy
    and fundamental rights and freedoms in Turkey, take shape, after an
    interval of six years is a great event per se. The fact that this
    visit will take place immediately after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan's visit is also meaningful. It seems that Baykal is trying
    to reach out to Turkish voters as much as he is seeking to reach out
    to EU circles via his Brussels visit.

    We can say that having ignored EU circles for years and not having
    refrained from acting so as to paralyze the EU membership process
    and reform activities whenever it found the opportunity, the CHP
    has, after some time, rediscovered the EU. As a natural consequence
    of this discovery, the CHP has opened a representation office in
    Brussels. However, we know well that instead of explaining its
    own policies to EU circles, this office has been conducting a crude
    propaganda campaign to defame the Turkish government and some civilian
    initiatives in Turkey. We are talking about a CHP whose chador and
    Quran course initiatives have been received with skepticism because
    of the repressive policies it had pursued until recently. So we are
    safe to assume that its Brussels initiative will be viewed with the
    same level of skepticism.

    Perhaps, the biggest benefit of Mr. Baykal's Brussels visit is that
    it will provide an opportunity for the CHP and its supporters, who
    have been causing tremors in the country, to see and understand the
    correspondence or lack thereof between what they have done for the last
    five years and what the EU acquis, democratic principles and universal
    human rights and freedoms propose. As a matter of fact, what triggers
    justifiable doubts about Mr. Baykal's sincerity are the serious issues
    that we expect will inevitably be discussed during this confrontation.

    I am sure that EU circles know well what I am talking about. How
    the CHP has been dragged into anti-democratic discourse, adopting
    an extremist, neo-nationalist and occasionally fascist language and
    stance, is well known by our European friends. However, I would like
    to recall some things for those who memories may be failing. I am
    sure that Baykal has very reasonable explanations to give about them
    to our European friends.

    Baykal, who, I expect, will assure Brussels that the CHP is fully
    loyal to the EU criteria and will continue to lend support to Turkey's
    membership process, will, no doubt, have a good explanation for
    why the CHP objected to the amendment of the infamous, repressive,
    pro-censorship Article 301, under which many writers and intellectuals,
    including Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk and assassinated Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink, have been tried and sentenced.

    Baykal should have a reasonable explanation for the objections he
    raised about the minority foundations bill, which aims to improve the
    property rights of minorities that have been living in this country
    to contemporary standards. I think he will also devise an explanation
    for his opposition to Kurdish-language broadcasts by the Turkish Radio
    and Television Corporation (TRT), through which our Kurdish citizens
    have felt for the first time that they are part of this country. I
    am sure Baykal's ideas about how a Kurdish TV station is an unfair
    use of public resources and will lead to inequality will be listened
    to with interest by his European addressees.

    Availing himself of this opportunity, Mr. Baykal should enlighten
    Brussels about his role in the republican rallies, which were
    organized in close collaboration with retired commanders, most of
    whom are now under arrest as part of the Ergenekon investigation,
    as well as civilian Ergenekon members, with the aim of blocking the
    democratic election of a president. It is obvious that he has some
    good reasons that explain why he tried to unlawfully extend the tenure
    of former President Ahmet Necdet Sezer. He should devise some pretext
    for having heartily defended the e-memorandum posted by the military
    on its Web site on April 27, 2007 to prevent Parliament from electing
    a president and to lend support to the 367 quorum conspiracy at the
    expense of the reputation of the law and the top judicial authority,
    the Constitutional Court.

    It is our great expectation that he will share his mind-blowing idea
    that, in a democratic country, a new constitution can only be made
    after a military coup with his European addressees, to whom he should
    also explain that he affords full support to the 1982 Constitution,
    which was drafted under military guardianship. Indeed, this idea may
    be inspiring to our European friends, who have failed to draft the
    Constitution of the European Union.

    There are many things Baykal will have to confront in Brussels,
    but finally, I would expect him to explain the logic of a political
    party advocating the interests and wishes of the state instead those
    of the nation, and prioritizing the military's influence on politics
    over politics itself. Of course, everyone will expect Mr. Baykal
    to list his reasons for acting as an advocate for the Ergenekon
    terrorist organization, which has played a role in every murder,
    massacre, assassination, legal scandal and attempt to create chaos
    in Turkey's recent past, and to describe how he feels about defending
    this shadowy network.

    I am sure Mr. Baykal, being a good orator and a master of U-turns,
    will have convincing explanations for all these points. But, let
    me give him a hint as to what he will see during his visit. As an
    influential member of the European Parliament whom I met several weeks
    ago said, all of Baykal's ingenious assertions will be as conclusive as
    "selling ice cream at the poles."

    Do not be misled by the foregoing into thinking that I am against
    Mr. Baykal's Brussels visit. Rather, I heartily support this visit
    as I believe that if he makes more frequent visits to Brussels,
    he will more easily take his party out of the anti-democratic mud,
    where it has been wallowing for some time.
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