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ANKARA: Veteran politician seeks to end politics of polarization

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  • ANKARA: Veteran politician seeks to end politics of polarization

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    March 13 2009


    Veteran politician seeks to end politics of polarization

    ISTANBUL-It is time to end prejudices and stop polarizing the
    community, according to one liberal mayoral candidate running on the
    Justice and Development Party, or AKP, ticket.


    A self-declared social democrat and humanist, architect Sinan Genim is
    the AKP's mayoral candidate for Istanbul's Kadıköy
    district, which has gone to main opposition Republican People's Party,
    or CHP, in three consecutive elections since 1994. "I am and have
    always been against factionalization. This nation has suffered too
    much from it and now we are creating artificial 'others,'" Genim told
    the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

    Kadıköy is considered by many to be a left-wing
    stronghold, though Genim dismisses such terminology as unnecessarily
    aggressive, and the AKP faces a difficult campaign in the highly
    polarized district. Many see the AKP as being against the Republic's
    secular founder, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.

    He expresses his distaste for those who use Atatürk as a
    political tool. "It is wrong to turn Atatürk into a sole
    property of one side. I did not declare my candidacy against
    Atatürk," said Genim. "Atatürk is for everyone. He is
    the reason we even have a democracy. The opposition is using political
    cliches to cover up its lack of vision."

    On whether his candidacy can overcome these prejudices, he admits it
    is much harder to change people's beliefs than to work with them on
    common concrete projects. "It is easier changing the structure of
    constructions than to make people overcome their fears," he said,
    though he promises not to hide behind polarizing slogans.

    "Genim's candidacy does show the AKP's attempt to appeal to a broader
    base, that the party embraces differing viewpoints," said Gila
    Benmayor, who is also a columnist for the Daily News. "But his victory
    and his attempt to break down these prejudices in
    Kadıköy are difficult to achieve because
    Kadıköy's beliefs are very solidified."

    Having served terms in the BeÅ?iktaÅ? district assembly
    and the Istanbul municipal assembly for the Motherland Party, or
    ANAVATAN, since 1989, Genim was offered the Kadıköy
    candidacy at the end of last year by Istanbul Mayor Kadir
    TopbaÅ? of the AKP.

    Genim's involvement with the AKP has stemmed from two main
    reasons. "First, it is just easier to accomplish things with the party
    in the majority. The AKP has a wide base and a greater public
    reach. Secondly, I am not out there to start a fight," he said. "I am
    all for rapprochement."

    "My whole life, I have followed a social democratic, humanist agenda
    while I was in ANAVATAN. And when the AKP asked if I would work with
    them, I accepted. Had I been a candidate of any other party I would
    argue exactly the same points."

    He sees the AKP as a reformist party that has made many progressive
    strides for Turkey. "For example, just a short while ago, we were on
    bad terms with all our neighbors, but now we have strengthened our
    relationships with many countries like Armenia, Syria, Iran and
    Georgia," he said.

    "Parties cannot win by just representing one particular group," Genim
    said. "They can only win the majority by representing all."
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