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Turkey Experiences Significant Changes: The New York Times

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  • Turkey Experiences Significant Changes: The New York Times

    TURKEY EXPERIENCES SIGNIFICANT CHANGES: THE NEW YORK TIMES

    news.am
    March 8 2010
    Armenia

    Recent arrests of high ranking servicemen in Turkey accused of
    coup d'etat attempt signal of significant changes in the country
    and militaries will no more play dominant role. This might assist
    strengthening of Turkish democracy, if the government and judicial
    officials follow the letter of law, The New York Times reads.

    For modern Turkey's history the army had been dominant and willing
    to use any means to keep Turkey a secular, Western-oriented state
    including disseat of 4 democratically elected leaders since 1960. In
    2007, the servicemen tried to hinder the election of Abdullah Gul
    of the Islamic-influenced Justice and Development Party (AKP) as
    president reasoning that his spouse wears hijab. The officers reckon
    that political life weakened considerably under AKP rule and pressure
    from the European Union, insisting that as part of Ankara's bid for
    membership, the military must hold more responsibility to civilian
    leaders, the source says.

    The recent detentions and arrests followed an article in Taraf
    independent paper that said about military documents from 2003
    meeting with description of coup staging. The servicemen admitted the
    meeting but insisted it was focused on protecting the country from
    external not domestic, threats. Since the arrests, the military's
    top leaders have shown welcome restraint. Meanwhile, relations with
    the U.S. hit new course on March 4, the U.S. House Committee on
    Foreign Affairs passed resolution on Armenian genocide. "We think the
    resolution was unnecessary, just as Ankara's denial of that tragedy is
    self-destructive. Instead of threatening Washington with retaliation
    for the vote, Ankara should focus on getting a normalization deal with
    Armenia back on track. The U.S. and other Western countries need to
    keep nudging Turkey forward while keeping the hope of E.U. membership
    alive and credible," The New York Times writes.

    Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan needs to restrain his autocratic
    tendencies and seek to replace the military-imposed constitution with
    the one stipulating rights for Kurds and other national minorities,
    freedom of religion and press, a commitment to secular rule and jural
    courts, the source concludes.
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