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ANKARA: CHP once again at odds with Socialist International's values

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  • ANKARA: CHP once again at odds with Socialist International's values

    Sunday's Zaman, Turkey
    July 19 2009


    CHP once again at odds with Socialist International's values


    The main opposition Republican People's Party's (CHP) recent attempt
    to have the Constitutional Court annul a widely acclaimed amendment
    paving the way for the instigators of military coups to be tried in
    civilian courts has proven once again that the party has made
    violating the Socialist International's (SI) values and principles a
    tradition.

    The amendment, which was passed with the approval of all parties
    represented in Parliament, prevents civilians from being tried by
    military courts and allows the trial of military personnel by civilian
    courts when charged with forming gangs, terrorism or crimes against
    the Constitution. The CHP voted in favor of this legislation but
    changed its stance less than 12 hours after it was approved because,
    party deputies say, they were fooled by the ruling Justice and
    Development Party (AK Party). The CHP then brought the amendment
    before the Constitutional Court, demanding its annulment.

    The CHP's move has been criticized nationwide because the amendment is
    widely seen as an opportunity to bring coup planners within the army
    to justice since the military judiciary, by its very nature, is not
    capable of conducting an independent and impartial hearing. Turkey's
    military courts and their rulings have incessantly been criticized by
    the European Union as their judgments are neither immune to the
    General Staff's influence nor independent of the hierarchical command
    structure of the military.

    If this amendment is annulled by the Constitutional Court, Turkey will
    again be the only member of the 47-nation Council of Europe where
    civilians can still be tried by military courts.

    SI condemns coup backers while CHP protects them

    A recent statement from the SI read, `The Council of the Socialist
    International ¦ condemns in the strongest terms the coup
    d'état against the government of President José Manuel
    Zelaya Rosales in Honduras,' inspiring people on the streets in Turkey
    to carry banners with the message `The CHP can now join the government
    in Honduras,' accusing the party of aligning itself with coup
    supporters. The SI defines itself as an `association of political
    parties and organizations which seek to establish democratic
    socialism.' Therefore, political parties affiliated with the SI should
    by definition be social democrats and should never inspire this kind
    of public criticism.

    The CHP has violated many articles in the SI's Ethical
    Charter. Article 3 in the SI's Ethical Charter states that its member
    parties will `reject and resolutely oppose any drift to
    authoritarianism as well as any political system which allows or
    practices the violation of human rights to conquer or impose its power
    (political assassination, torture, arbitrary detention, press
    censorship, banning or repression of peaceful demonstrations, etc).'
    Almost all the offenses listed here are in the thousands of pages of
    indictments prepared by civilian prosecutors against the defendants
    standing trial in the ongoing Ergenekon case, which is widely believed
    to be a historic case, strengthening Turkey's democracy. However, CHP
    leader Deniz Baykal has stated on several occasions that he is the
    advocate of the Ergenekon defendants, who are primarily charged with
    plotting to topple the democratically elected government. With its
    latest attempt to have the judicial
    reform legislation annulled by the Constitutional Court, the CHP
    simply added to its record of standing by the prime suspects of
    anti-democratic actions.

    The party, however, no longer surprises observers in the country since
    it already revealed that it was not going to take a stance against
    interventions into Turkey's democracy by welcoming the General Staff's
    April 27, 2007 memorandum, which mainly criticized then-Foreign
    Minister Abdullah Gül's presidential candidacy. The statement
    was slammed by the government as well as almost all political and
    non-political circles in the country, but while Baykal remained silent
    and did not show any reaction at all, the party's deputy chairman,
    Onur Ã-ymen, said his own thoughts were completely in line with
    what was written by then-Chief of General Staff Gen. YaÅ?ar
    BüyükanÄ&#x B1;t in the memorandum.

    All the same CHP

    Besides the CHP's most recent move, many other instances showing the
    CHP's tradition of being in stark contrast with the SI are still fresh
    in people's minds. Article 3 of the SI's Ethical Charter also says
    member parties will `respect and reinforce fundamental human rights,
    be they individual rights (respect of private life, freedom of
    thought, belief, education, sexual orientation and the right to equal
    treatment, etc.)' and `fight against all forms of discrimination based
    on gender, race, ethnic origin, sexual orientation, language, religion
    and philosophical or political beliefs.'

    The CHP, however, which is supposed to be fully committed to observing
    these principles, previously had legislation allowing women who wear
    headscarves into universities annulled by the Constitutional
    Court. The legislation was passed with the backing of more than 400
    deputies in the 550-seat Turkish Parliament in February 2008. Thanks
    to the CHP, female students wearing headscarves simply out of respect
    for their religious duties are still unable to attend universities in
    Turkey.

    This was neither the first nor the last of such discriminatory
    behavior by the CHP. The party took no action when CHP Ä°zmir
    deputy Canan Arıtman made racist statements about President
    Gül. Arıtman alleged that Gül was of Armenian
    origin and that was why he had adopted a moderate stance toward an
    apology campaign to Armenians initiated by a group of intellectuals in
    the country last year. The CHP went under fire for tolerating
    Arıtman's attitude, described as `fascist' by many both in and
    outside Turkey. It is easy to see that Arıtman's statements in
    particular and the CHP's lack of action against her in general violate
    the SI's code of conduct.

    The CHP has a long tradition of violating the SI's proclaimed values
    and principles, which the association vows to comply with `in the
    strictest way possible.' The only question remaining here is whether
    the association will take any action against the CHP for its conduct,
    particularly in the last two years, or if it will risk losing
    credibility in the eyes of social democrats, not only in Turkey, but
    also on a wider scale.

    `CHP should be expelled from SI immediately'

    Public concern about the CHP was conveyed to the SI at last year's
    congress in Athens. Professor Baskın Oran demanded the CHP's
    expulsion in a letter he sent to members of the association in
    2008. Speaking to Sunday's Zaman, he said the CHP's application to
    Constitutional Court last week has made it even more necessary for the
    SI to take action against the party.

    `I wrote last year to SI members that the CHP was not a social
    democratic but a statist and pro status quo political party. I had
    backed up my argument with what they had done during the presidential
    elections and in the headscarf issue. This year, it is continuing to
    do more of the same. Now, the SI should not lose one more minute and
    immediately expel the CHP, not only for its own credibility but also
    for the sake of making the CHP a real social democratic party,' he
    suggested.

    Tarık Ziya Ekinci, a Kurdish intellectual and an ex-deputy from
    the now-defunct Turkish Workers' Party (TÄ°P), also told
    Sunday's Zaman that the CHP is not qualified to be a member of the
    SI. `The party's last move was a blow to Turkish democracy, and such
    an undemocratic and also anti-democratic party can have nothing to do
    with the SI's code of conduct,' he said, openly calling for action
    from the association.




    19 July 2009, Sunday
    MUSTAFA EDÄ°B YILMAZ ANKARA

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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