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ANKARA: Positive Agenda

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  • ANKARA: Positive Agenda

    Star, Turkey
    July 13 2013


    Positive Agenda

    by by Mensur Akgun

    Several things that occurred inside Turkey and in its region in the
    past few months have strained the societal fault lines, forced the
    economy, and diminished the political arena. The problems pertaining
    to the Gezi Park incidents, the repercussions for Turkey of the
    unending civil war in Syria, and now the coup in Egypt have seriously
    affected us all.

    Turkey was presented by the world media as a collapsing economy and a
    shaky democracy. Taksim was shown as a war zone. In the course of one
    month, Turkey to a great extent lost the prestige it won in 10 years.

    We must now speak of "good things" and reduce the tension in the
    social sphere in order to dress our wounds domestically as well as
    rectify our image abroad. The time has come for a "Positive Agenda"
    for Turkey. It is time to take new initiatives and to deliver new
    balcony speeches.

    The politicians could leave the accounting of the past to historians.
    As for the cause-effect relationship, social scientists and conspiracy
    theorists will address this issue with great gusto and love for the
    profession. Rather than focus on lobbies and foreign forces, the
    politicians should turn their attention to the new constitution, the
    solution process, and the overcoming of the problems with the
    neighbours.

    What transformed Turkey into Turkey in the past 10 years, what brought
    the AKP [Justice and Development Party] to power again and again, and
    what enabled Turkey to be shown as an example in the world is the
    AKP's agenda of finding solutions to problems. The AKP must revert to
    its own agenda, conduct politics on the basis of justice, and be
    all-embracing.

    Every speech made with the aim of closing the ranks is further
    polarizing the society and damaging Turkey as a whole. Today, we see
    fissures not only along the social fault lines, but even in daily
    life, and quarrels are breaking out between protesters and those who
    sustain material and moral damage from the protests.

    Fortunately, the speeches delivered by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan in the past few days leave the impression that there will be a
    return to the old agenda. Especially his statement concerning the
    drafting of a new constitution - the statement calling on the
    political parties to reach an agreement to enact the provisions on
    which there is consensus by working day and night - contains the core
    of a constructive political mentality.

    In fact, having a democratic constitution will assuage the society and
    strengthen the Kurdish solution process. To avoid being affected by
    the turbulence in its surrounding region, Turkey should express the
    will to resolve its own internal problems more loudly, close its gaps
    in democracy, and solve its human rights problems.

    The exaggerated sensitivity that developed in the United States and
    the EU during the Gezi Park events should also be carefully
    interpreted, and it should not be dismissed as prejudice or the work
    of this-and-that lobby. It must be realized that the source of the
    selectiveness in Western perceptions is based on the debate concerning
    the shift in axis and that the relations with Israel lie at the core
    of this debate, and ways must be sought to cooperate with lobbies
    rather than accuse them.

    Thought must be given to the mode and content of the rapprochement
    with Israel in the wake of the expected apology. The methods of
    normalizing the relations with Armenia without offending Azerbaijan
    must be discussed. It must be realized that the road from Ankara to
    Brussels goes not only through Diyarbakir, but also through Cyprus.
    The solution of the Cyprus problem in one way or another will help to
    greatly surmount the impasse we are experiencing with the EU even if
    Germany does not want it.

    If Turkey readopts its solution finding approach of the early 2000's,
    it will become a side to solutions, not problems, and it will remain
    above problems. The policy that must be adopted should be to shape the
    future rather than criticize the mistakes of the past. The price for
    Turkey of appearing to take sides in its region should be carefully
    calculated.

    No matter how difficult, as the party in power, the AKP must do all
    this by itself. It should not expect miracles, not from the opposition
    in parliament and not from the opposition in the street. The
    government is alone when it drafts the constitution, when it advances
    the solution process, and when it overcomes the problems with its
    neighbours. The opposition will remain the opposition, be it in the
    problems or in their solutions.

    [Translated from Turkish]

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