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ANKARA: Can't Build Country On Fear, Says Prime Minister Tayyip Erdo

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  • ANKARA: Can't Build Country On Fear, Says Prime Minister Tayyip Erdo

    CAN'T BUILD COUNTRY ON FEAR, SAYS PRIME MINISTER TAYYIP ERDOGAN

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 23 2009
    Turkey

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has stated that his party has
    no fear of pushing forward with its democratization reform agenda to
    solve the Kurdish question, saying that those looking to spread fears
    of disintegration and division were in reality trying to obstruct
    democratization.

    Speaking at a party caucus in Ankara's Kızılcahaman on Saturday,
    Erdogan said cowardliness would not help Turkey deal with its age-old
    problems. He asked: "If Orhan Gazi was afraid, would Bursa have been
    established? If Fatih was afraid, would Ä°stanbul have been?" and
    said his party would go on with its democratization push without fear.

    "You can't build a country on fear. You can't build a future on fear.

    You can't build democracy on fear," he said. The prime minister said
    they saw their fight for democracy not as a problem of the Justice
    and Development Party (AK Party), but a problem of the country.

    Erdogan said that in the past, the Turkish nation has seen as many
    glories as times when the nation and the country have been in danger.

    Stating that the integrity and unity of the Turkish nation have been
    tested many times throughout history, he said the Turkish nation has
    always succeeded in moving forward and burying past traumas. Even
    though the Turkish nation has been able to look optimistically into
    the future, some are using past grievances as an instrument of fear,
    Erdogan said. "There are those who are making efforts to create a
    new society of fear. When history is not enough, they create virtual
    fears and imaginary threats."

    He said in the AK Party's seven years in power, he has seen this many
    times. "No matter what long-standing issue we tried to tackle, they put
    up obstacles in front of us. We said we want to get in the European
    Union, they said our national identity is in danger. We said Cyprus,
    they said 'our national interests are under threat'. We said we want
    zero problems with our neighbors, they said [Turkey's foreign policy]
    axis is shifting. We said Armenia, they said Sevres. ... And now,
    we say the process of national unity and brotherhood [referring to
    the democratic initiative], they say it is treason, they say it is
    separation. The same politics, the same attitude and I am sorry to
    say this but they are displaying the same cowardly approach."

    He also talked about the recent discussions on alleged illegal
    wiretappings of the offices of judiciary members. "Those who are trying
    to make this look like it is linked to the government are acting on ill
    will, they are trying to influence the public and create confusion,"
    he said.

    He said the wiretappings had nothing to do with the government. "And
    neither could this [link] ever happen." He said the wiretapping
    scandal was now in hands of the judiciary and would be sorted out
    in the legal process. He said, "We see wiretapping without legal
    permission as disrespect for a person, whoever that person might be."
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