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One Minefield To Another

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  • One Minefield To Another

    ONE MINEFIELD TO ANOTHER

    Al-Ahram Weekly
    http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2009/954/re6.htm
    2 - 8 July 2009

    The Turkish government's attempt to clear mines along its southern
    and eastern borders triggers nationalist sentiment amid accusations
    that reclaimed land will be leased to Israelis, writes Gareth Jenkins
    in Ankara

    On Thursday, opposition parties in the Turkish parliament formally
    applied to the Turkish Constitutional Court for the annulment of
    a law that would enable foreign companies to lease land along the
    country's southern and eastern borders free of charge in return for
    clearing it of landmines. The move follows speculation in the Turkish
    media that the ruling Justice and Development Party (JDP) planned to
    award the contract to companies from Israel.

    There are estimated to be nearly 900,000 landlines along Turkey's
    southern and eastern borders: approximately 600,000 along the border
    with Syria, 75,000 on the border with Iraq, 190,000 near Iran and
    22,000 on the border with Armenia. The landmines no longer serve
    any military purpose. Around 3,000 Turkish citizens are thought to
    have been killed in landmine accidents over the last 50 years, with
    over 7,000 seriously injured. In 2004, Turkey signed the 1997 Ottawa
    Treaty and undertook to dispose of all of its landmines by 2014,
    including 2.5 million believed stored by the Turkish military.

    Initially, the mine-clearing task was to be given to the Turkish
    military. However, after several years of studies, the Turkish
    military concluded that the cost would be too high -- both in terms
    of the equipment needed and the likely death toll among its conscript
    soldiers during mine-clearing operations. Earlier this year, the JDP
    announced plans to put the task out to tender, in expectation that
    the contract would eventually be awarded to a specialised foreign firm.

    Government officials estimated that clearing the mines would take five
    years at a cost of approximately $500 million. Rather than increase
    the burden on the state's already overstretched budget, lawmakers
    decided to allow the successful bidder to lease the reclaimed land
    free of charge for a period of 44 years following the clearing of the
    mines. The expectation was that the land bordering Syria could be used
    for agriculture, integrated into the massive hydropower and irrigation
    scheme in southeast Turkey known as the Southeast Anatolian Project.

    In trying to clear one minefield, the government walked straight
    into another. Commentators in the Turkish media, including several
    newspapers and television channels that are close to the JDP,
    immediately accused Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of planning to
    award the mine-clearing contract to Israeli companies. They noted that
    not only are several leading mine-clearing companies owned by Jews but
    that Israel was also at the forefront of irrigated agriculture. In a
    country where anti-Israeli and anti-Semitic sentiment is widespread,
    the result was a public outcry as Erdogan was charged with planning
    to give away thousands of square kilometres of Turkey to the Israelis.

    "Our borders are our honour," declared Canan Aritman, a member of
    parliament for the nationalist Republican People's Party (RPP). "We
    can't just give them away to foreigners."

    There were also claims that Erdogan was trying to ingratiate himself
    after infuriating the Israelis at the World Economic Forum in Davos,
    Switzerland, in January this year, when he stormed out of a televised
    debate with Israeli President Shimon Peres in protest at the brutality
    of Israel's military assault on Gaza.

    Erdogan has reacted angrily, describing his critics as racist and
    religiously prejudiced and having a fascist mentality. He claimed that
    the government's plans would provide jobs for local Muslims, rather
    than foreign Jews. "Money has no religion or race. They will invest
    here and Ahmet, Mehmet and Ayse will find work, not Yitzhak," he said.

    But his critics were unconvinced. "It is very strange for him to
    characterise opposition to the presence of Israel, which is the
    main troublemaker in the Middle East, in a critical area like the
    Turkish-Syrian border, as hostility to foreign capital," commented
    Hakan Albayrak in the daily Yeni Safak, which is usually unreservedly
    supportive of the JDP.

    "If reacting to Israel is a fascistic act, then he became the leading
    fascist when he reacted to Israel in Davos," Albayrak added.

    There are numerous calls for the mine- clearing tender to be restricted
    to Turkish- owned companies and for the reclaimed land to be donated
    to local people, starting with those injured or who lost relatives
    in landmine accidents.

    Nevertheless, when the draft bill -- which retains the possibility
    of foreign tenders -- was brought before parliament in early June,
    Erdogan ensured that enough JDP parliamentarians were onboard to vote
    it into law. What happens next remains unclear. At first sight, there
    would appear to be nothing in the law that contravenes the Turkish
    constitution. But the Turkish Constitutional Court often appears to
    follow its own logic. It is possible that it finds a reason to annul
    the law. What is undoubted is that until the court issues a ruling
    the contract cannot be put out to tender.

    Whatever the court eventually decides, and despite public outcry
    over the possibility of leasing land to Israeli companies, merely
    by forcing Erdogan to justify the law, the Turkish opposition has
    probably inadvertently repaired some of the damage to Turkish-Israeli
    relations that was caused by Erdogan's outburst at Davos.
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