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ANKARA: Name Change Referenda To Be Held In 2010 As Part Of Initiati

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  • ANKARA: Name Change Referenda To Be Held In 2010 As Part Of Initiati

    NAME CHANGE REFERENDA TO BE HELD IN 2010 AS PART OF INITIATIVE

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 18 2009
    Turkey

    Civil society organizations demanded that the name of Tunceli be
    reverted back to Dersim. The city's name was changed in 1937 in a
    bid to remove all traces of the Dersim Rebellion. However, many civil
    society organizations and city residents continued to call the city
    Dersim despite the official change.

    The Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government, which began
    a parliamentary discussion on the country's democratization package
    despite staunch opposition from the Republican People's Party (CHP)
    and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), has decided to pursue the
    initiative unilaterally.

    The government finds support from the Democratic Society Party's (DTP)
    unreliable. Unable to take bold steps to determine the content of the
    package due to resistance from the opposition parties, the government
    will disclose the main features of the first stage of the package,
    which will go into effect in 2010, in Parliament. One of the plans
    in the first stage is to hold referenda on restoring the original
    names of settlements whose names were changed during the single-party
    period. There are currently 28 applications at the Interior Ministry
    requesting referenda to change the names of settlements.

    The ministry will evaluate each request and will demand a study into
    whether the request reflects the will of the region. For example, a
    request to restore an Armenian name to a settlement where there are
    no Armenians will not be considered. If the request is compatible
    with the demographics of the area, the Interior Ministry will hold
    a referendum in that area and the name of the settlement will be
    determined according to the results of the referendum.

    The Interior Ministry, which circumscribed the scope of the initiative
    due to opposition from the CHP and the MHP, has excluded items that
    require constitutional amendments. The AK Party remains adamant about
    pursuing the initiative despite tension in Parliament on Tuesday when
    deputies convened to discuss the initiative.

    According to the Interior Ministry's plan, steps that can be taken
    through administrative decisions will be implemented first. Issues
    that require changes to bylaws and statutes will be put into effect
    toward mid-2010 and items that require constitutional amendments will
    be addressed last.

    According to a study ordered by the ministry, close to 15,000
    settlement names have been changed since the early years of the
    republic. The ministry, which will compare studies conducted by
    various universities on this topic with the data in state archives,
    estimates that close to 100 settlement names could be changed in 2010.

    With the government planning to focus on referenda to change
    settlement names next year, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and
    state ministers will try to explain the democratic initiative package
    to the public in 2010.

    What does the package include?

    The first stage of the democratic initiative package was also put
    together by the Interior Ministry. According to information AK Party
    executives gave Today's Zaman, the government will be particularly
    cautious about keeping all steps related to the initiative within
    the framework of the first three articles of the Turkish Constitution.

    Turkish will continue to be the official language of Turkey, however,
    obstacles related to the use of other languages and dialects will be
    removed. An amendment will be made to the Radio and Television Supreme
    Council (RTUK) Law to remove the time restrictions on broadcasting
    in Kurdish and private television and radio stations will be allowed
    to broadcast in Kurdish. While public education in other languages
    will not be allowed, obstacles to learning native languages will be
    removed. Political parties will be allowed to campaign in different
    languages and the Religious Affairs Directorate will release a
    Kurdish translation of the Holy Quran soon. Steps will be taken
    to ensure that people who fled Turkey after the Sept. 12, 1980,
    military coup and were stripped of their Turkish citizenship will
    have their citizenship restored. People with Kurdish roots who lost
    their citizenship rights will be given the right to become Turkish
    citizens upon the Interior Ministry's offer, provided that they were
    never involved in terrorism or armed demonstration.

    There will not be a general amnesty for members of terrorist
    organizations, but there will be abatements for prisoners as well
    as those who are still in the mountains. The first goal is to disarm
    those in the mountains. Amendments will be made to Article 216 of the
    Turkish Penal Code (TCK) to expand the scope of freedom of expression,
    and precautionary measures will be taken to prevent gaps that could
    lead to hate crimes.

    The Makhmur refugee camp in northern Iraq will be vacated with the
    cooperation of the United Nations and the Iraqi government, and some
    6,000 refugees will be returned to Turkey. Steps will be taken to
    ensure that the terrorist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) does not
    use the camp.
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