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Ankara: Turkey, Bulgaria And The Eu's Nobel Peace Prize

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  • Ankara: Turkey, Bulgaria And The Eu's Nobel Peace Prize

    Turkey, Bulgaria And The Eu's Nobel Peace Prize

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Dec 18 2012
    Turkey

    "So where does your government get its strength?" a Bulgarian think
    tanker I met at a conference asked me. "From the people," I replied.

    "The ruling party got 50 percent of the votes."

    "Does it count? In Bulgaria you can still buy votes," he told me. "I
    have many criticisms about Turkish democracy, but holding fair
    elections is not one of them," I said.

    I was, however, astonished to hear about vote rigging in an EU
    member country. Obviously I did not want to jump to a conclusion
    from just one comment. Still, when this has come in addition to the
    anti-democratic steps taken by Hungary, another EU country, on press
    freedoms, my invincible conviction about the soft power of the EU as
    a transforming force was a bit shaken... until I started to do some
    homework about Bulgaria, as I was set to have an interview with the
    country's president.

    The EU's transforming effects seem to be at work in Bulgaria, and
    one of the areas where it is best manifested looks to be Sofia's
    relations with Turkey as well as its Turkish minority.

    Let's be frank. When you are neighboring an 75 million-strong country
    and 10 percent of your own population has ethnic kinship with that
    neighbor, this can lead to some uneasiness. Communist Bulgaria's ethnic
    assimilation campaigns constitute dark pages of the two countries'
    relations. In this respect it has been unfortunate that the Bulgarian
    Parliament's adoption at the beginning of this year of a declaration of
    apology did not get the attention it deserved from the Turkish press.

    The declaration was not adopted as a result of diplomatic pressure
    from Ankara. Neither was it pushed by Bulgaria's Turkish party nor
    by the European Commission. It was therefore a clear manifestation
    of Bulgarian political maturity. Being an EU member has certainly
    played a role in attaining this maturity, as has been the case with
    all of the other European countries, which explains why the EU has
    got the Nobel Prize.

    Obviously there is still room for improvement about the demands of
    the Bulgarian Turks. The problem over who should be the legitimate
    religious representative seems to have been solved according to the
    preferences of the Bulgarian Turks. Expectations as to the use of
    Turkish, be it in education or broadcasting, have still not been met
    fully, but there seems to be a healthy ground for dialogue to solve
    the issues. "When you look to the Turkish minority in Greece, you
    can't even compare it; the situation is so much better in Bulgaria,"
    a Turkish diplomat told me.

    No doubt pragmatism also has a role to play in the improvement of
    relations between Turkey and Bulgaria. The government in Sofia most
    probably sees more room for prosperity when it looks to its east, where
    there is a rising economic center like Turkey, than when it looks to
    its west, where European states are struggling with financial troubles.

    The municipal council in the town of Yambol in southern Bulgaria,
    for example, has revoked its October 2010 declaration recognizing
    Armenians' claims of genocide because of complaints from a local
    organization that said it was hampering their business with Turkey.

    The decision, taken last October, was immediately followed by the
    visit of the governor of Edirne, who was accompanied by a group
    of businessmen.

    December/18/2012



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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