Turkey weighs cost of EU integration
April 10, 2001
By Chris Morris
Special to The Christian Science Monitor
DIYARBAKIR, TURKEY - Dozens of children chase soccer balls along the
narrow,
potholed streets. Others play in the dust. Small groups of people loiter
on nearly every
corner.
In some places, Diyarbakir resembles a refugee camp, and in many respects
it is. Hundreds
of thousands of villagers, forced out of the countryside by the Army
over the past few years,
arecrammed into this mainly Kurdish city. By every social and economic
indicator, it is the
poorest region in the country - and the biggest obstacle to Turkey's
aspirations of joining the
European Union.
The EU has criticized Turkey's treatment of the minority Kurds, saying
EU acceptance
hinges on fundamental change. But parts of the Turkish establishment
fear thatimplementing
economic and political reform might encourage the Kurds to push forautonomy
or even
independence.
The reality of integration with the West is forcing Turkey to decide
just how European it
wants to be.
For two decades the southeast was at the center of the brutal conflict
between the Turkish
state and Kurdish rebels from the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK). Since
the capture and
trial of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan in 1999, the fighting has almost
stopped. But promises
of massive economic investment have yet to be put into practice, and
freedom of expression
is still tightly controlled in a region governed under emergency rule.
"The number of killings has gone down compared to a few years ago,"
says Mehmet Ozal, as
he pushes a cart loaded with vegetables along the street. "But in other
respects things are
terrible, and people are waiting for change."
Last month Turkey released details of a "National Program" of proposed
reforms, in line
with its bid for EU membership. This massive undertaking has much to
commend it, but on
crucial political issues like the Kurdish question it falls far short
of European expectations.
At the heart of the debate is the right of individuals to use the language
of their choice. A few
years ago the use of Kurdish was strictly forbidden, even though an
estimated 12 million
people here are of Kurdish origin. The restrictions have been eased,
but many influential
parts of the establishment, including the armed forces, believe that
is is quite enough.
The National Program states that Turkish is the country's official language,
but it says other
languages and dialects can be used in daily life so long as they do
not promote separatism.
But the EU wants much more specific reform. It believes Turkey should
allow Kurds to
broadcast and educate children in their own language. Nationalists
fear that this would
reignite Kurdish rebellion and weaken national unity.
The sensitivity of the debate was revealed late last month when Turkish
Prime Minister
Bulent Ecevit ordered government offices to prevent people using Kurdish
place names. He
called the place names an "attempt to create an artificial separatist
movement."
Meanwhile, in this region, hopes have faded that a new era of political
liberalization was
beginning, and many people in Diyarbakir are bitterly disappointed.
"The problem is that
people cannot express themselves freely," says the city's Kurdish mayor,
Feridun Celik. "The
state has to trust its people and respect their cultural diversity."
But walking around Diyarbakir, the limits of official policy soon become
apparent. Modern
technology has brought satellite dishes to every building, beaming
Kurdish language TV
stations from Europe.
"Everyone watches Kurdish TV," says one man, who wouldn't give his name.
"My mother
doesn't understand Turkish. What else do they expect her to do?"
Many pro-European Turks agree that change is long overdue, but there
are profound
political disagreements about how Turkey should approach reform over
the next few years.
Nationalists fear the PKK is using politics to make the gains it failed
to win on the
battlefield. Mr. Ocalan has certainly changed his tune, and he now
speaks from his prison
cell of his democratic project. The fact that Ocalan and many other
Kurds have begun
framing their demands for change in European terms makes Turkey's European
dilemma
even more acute.
"This is a culture where compromise is often seen as a sign of weakness,"
says one Western
diplomat, "and that makes things more difficult."
A certain amount of soul-searching is inevitable, and the European Union
is prepared to bide
its time."Things must change on the ground," says the EU's Commissioner
for Enlargement,
Gunther Verheugen. "We need to see a different reality in Turkey."
But while the EU may be ready to wait for reform, there is much less patience in Diyarbakir.
"We want to live like Americans, like Europeans, like the rest of Turkey,"
says Hamdullah
Aktas, a displaced villager sitting in his small apartment. "We Kurds
should have the same
rights as everyone else, but at the momentwe're stuck."
****************
The
Kurdistan Observer
www.kurdistanobserver.com