Category: Dr. Gül Çelkan

  • FIRST PRESIDENT ELECT

    FIRST PRESIDENT ELECT

    9253Turkey is at the verge of deciding who will be her first president elect. The country is really having to go through a phase where many controversial ideas are bound to come up. This will be the first time that the public will go to ballot boxes to cast their vote for the next president of the country. Formerly, it was the Turkish Grand National Assembly that was charged with the responsibility of choosing the President from among the MP’s elected by public vote. There had been instances when the nominee was a high ranking public figure but again the MP’s were to vote.

    Currently there are three nominees who will be running for the President’s Office. Mr. Erdogan, the current Prime Minister, nominated by the ruling party, and Selahattin Demirtas, the leader of and nominated by HDP have political identities. However, the third candidate , Professor Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu was initially a faculty member, having traveled extensively, and is known for his Chairing the Organization of the Islamic Conference.   Professor Ihsanoglu was nominated jointly by CHP (Republican People’s Party) and MHP (National Movement Party).

    The entire world knows about the current Prime Minister of Turkey who has not only beguiled the citizens of his own country but the entire world as well. He started with a very low profile but now has turned into a very authoritarian figure denying all the allegations made against him, changing the rules of law according to his own interests, and most importantly his main goal is to demolish the Turkish Republic and establish a fundamentalist country with him being the sultan and the caliph. This implies Turkey would be governed by Sharia Law, and rather than moving forward she would go backwards to the corrupt times in history.

    Unfortunately, since the education system of the country mainly in the eastern provinces is very low as well as the income of the families, they are very gullible and believe in readily to what they are told. And Mr. Erdogan knowing this weakness of these people goes to them quite often giving them food and other sustenance the would be needing, and in return gets their votes. Actually this is not procuring their votes based on their free-will but using bribery as a tool to achieve his goals.

    During these past 12 years, unfortunately the country has not developed, on the contrary, gotten poorer. The deficiency in the budget is the worst ever since the establishment of the Republic. People have lost their power of purchasing goods. The minimum wage is ridiculous. There is no way a family of four could survive on that. But when it comes to the salaries of the MP’s, they have more than quadrupled.Erdogan and his family have gotten rich, actually he being the ninth richest prime minister in the world, and the entire country has gotten poorer.

    He has been ruling the country so badly that he started off sating there will be zero tolerance for skirmishes with our neighbors, but right now, we are at a conflict with every single one of them. He had said the government would no way bargain with the murderer of 30,000 people including children and women, who is imprisoned on the island of Imrali. He has done just the opposite and will definitely grant him complete amnesty, give him all his rights so that he could run for an office. These are things beyond any reasonable person’s understanding.

    These and many more all add up and that’s why we are saying do not cast your vote to this man. You should, on the other hand, consider Professor Ihsanoglu as the only candidate who will be the true and loyal president of the republic and work within the powers bestowed upon him by the Constitution and Laws with abiding faith.

    To put it in a nutshell, then who should the Turkish people vote for the joint candidate of CHP and MHP supported by the other minor political parties?

    Say YES to Ekmeleddin. Why?

    1. It is going to be a strict NO to Tayyip. The only way to say YES to Ekmeleddin is by saying NO to Tayyip.
    2. If Ekmeleddin is elected he will be the President of the Republic of Turkey, however, if Tayyip gets the office, he will be an American style president.
    3. If Ekmeleddin is elected, Turkey will be remain as a unified nation, whereas if Tayyip gets to power, he will let establish a Kurdish state.
    4. If Ekmeleddin is elected, this will be the first tome Tayyip would have lost an election and this will be a great blemish on his charisma.
    5. If Ekmeleddin is elected, he will be able to control the dictatorial powers of AKP.
    6. If Ekmeleddin gets majority of the votes, Tayyip will no longer be able to say, “who the heck are you?” because Ekmeleddin would stand before him as a president with the support of more than 50 % of the people.
    7. If Ekmeleddin wins, he will have gotten more than 50% of the votes, and this would put AKP to a minority status.
    8. If Ekmeleddin wins, then the two parties CHP and MHP can again collaborate in the upcoming elections.
    9. If Ekmeleddin wins, everybody is going to see that the wife of a Muslim President need not cover herself up, and this will put an end to the headgear crisis,
    10. Ekmeleddin is for cultural Islam whereas Tayyip favors political Islam.
    11. While Ekmeleddin supports Islamic culture and science, Tayyip backs the Muslim terrorists.
    12. Ekmeleddin is heavily busy with writing articles, books, in short immersed in science, whereas Tayyip is busy in trade, buying and selling gold, construction business hence depriving the country of all its wealth.
    13. If Ekmeleddin wins, Turkey will have a peace-loving President contrary to Tayyip who is for all kinds of fights.
    14. Had Ekmeleddin and same path, then the pro-Tayyips would not have attacked him.
    15. Had those who attack Ekmeleddin claim themselves to be pro-Ataturk been for Ataturk in the true sense of the word, then today we would not have needed Ekmeleddin.

    There is no way the Turkish nation will let an Islamist dictator run the country. Therefore disregarding all the differences of opinion, putting into oblivion all those remarks made against the candidate, should work for him and make him get the position in the first leg of the elections on August 10. Turkey should pass this first test very successfully.

     

     

  • Discourse Analysis

    Discourse Analysis

     

     

    Assoc. Prof. Dr. Gul Celkan

    With the passing of time, we come to see that new terminology finds it way into  languages.. Over the past ten years or so, I have always been annoyed by hearing the term “democratically elected” members of the parliament, the prime minister, and so forth.

    When you google this word, and look at the photos, you will come to grips with my point: why I feel so irritated upon hearing this term. Firstly, you will realize there are photos of the “democratically elected” dictators of the third countries.

    Isn’t this ironical? So dictators are elected democratically, what about the other parliamentarians or prime ministers, or even presidents? Nobody ever says American presidents nor French or German prime ministers  were elected democratically.

    The reason is obvious. In these  most powerful countries of the world, all the mechanisms of democracy work. Why should they feel it a need to keep repeating their leaders went through democratic elections?

    However, when you look at The third countries, they seem to have elected statesmen, however, beneath the surface they are dictators who were brought to power through  elections.. To hide this fact, the term democratically elected  has become very popular thus beguiling the world.

    Let’s take a glance at the situation in Turkey. When local and foreign media refer to the current prime minister and his government, they insistingly use the term democratically elected. This hides the fact that the elections were not conducted properly, and was manipulated from within and without.  When you go back and look at the diction used when referring to the cabinet members or parliamentarians, there is no mention of “democratically” elected Demirel, Ecevit, Ozal, Yilmaz or others. Nobody can say the Turkish election system did not function  on democratic principles up until 2002. On the contrary, it was with the 2002 elections that Turkish elections and voting system bid farewell to fairness, clarity, accountability, and became a victim of an utterly  antidemocratic system.

    It is a known fact that when some very significant value is missing, people tend to patch it so that nobody would understand the reality. Its just like the commercials. The concept such ads try to bring to the forefront through constant repetition is actually not there. Yet, hearing it told to you persistently makes you believe it does exist. The alert ones will not fall into this trap,

    The same situation applies to the Turkish elected government. They were made or rather forced to be elected, and as a cover for this heinous project , the term “democratically elected” has been in constant use for the past twelve years.

    We the true believers of democracy have not fallen into this trap. People who think likewise cannot be beguiled by such misleading discourse used.  No matter how often the term is used to refer to the current ruling party, we know there is a striking contrast  between the reality and what is tried to be shown as factual.

     

  • In Memory of His Excellency Rauf Raif Denktas, the Founder and the First President of The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus

    In Memory of His Excellency Rauf Raif Denktas, the Founder and the First President of The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus

    In Memory of His Excellency Rauf Raif Denktas, the Founder and the First President of The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
    A day never to be forgotten: January 13, 2012.
    denktas2
    It was April 15, 2005 when I had the honor to interview His Excellency Rauf Raif Denktas, a week before the presidential elections in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus. Here is how our conversation started:
    “All I can say is I wish the best of luck to all the candidates and hope the best wins, and whatever the result of the elections naturally, he will be our president and we shall try to help him with our background knowledge if he wants it, we will support him if he is supporting the independence and sovereignty of the Turkish Republic of Cyprus, we will try and prevent mistakes which we regard will destroy our Republic and its independence so I hope that it will be a fair change for the good of the country.. I repeat I shall be available whenever wanted and if they want to share my experiences.
    What is my experience during all these years? I was 7 years old when the Greek Cypriots burned the government house for ENOSIS, I was 21 years old after the 2nd World War when Greek Cypriots who had been banished from Cyprus for taking part in that rebellion turned back with higher voices for union with Greece, ENOSIS. Ever since we have been struggling to prevent it in order to prevent domination by Greek Cypriots, and in order to prevent Cyprus becoming a Greek island which will close Turkey to the Mediterranean. If that happens this will be 13th island around the Turkish coast so Turkey has a very important strategic cause in Cyprus; luckily for us because that is why we have been saved by Turkey in 1974. So if anyone thinks Turkey will abandon the Island of Cyprus, and will abandon us, then they are very mistaken. We want a settlement; settlement has not been achieved because the world has settled the Greek Cypriot problem for them by treating them wrongly as the legitimate government of Cyprus.”
    I had many talks, conversations, interviews with his Excellency but this was one of the most memorable ones, as for the first time in its history the country was not going to see Denktas as one of the presidential candidates. How humble he was, as always, in his responses.

    Born in Pathos o January 27th, 1924, he lived a life fully devoted to the welfare of his country and even in his dying bed yelled out saying to the Greeks, “Don’t you ever dare forget: the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus is a sovereign independent state!” and then his soul departed. This was January 13, 2012.

    In remembrance of Denktas, the legendary man of the Turkish Cypriot people, the idol, the patriot, the leader, the President, the commander…. Words really do fall short of describing his attributes, yet I will have to just say he was not only our President but he was just like a Fatherly figure to all, especially to me.

    Never has there been a day I have not thought about you His Excellency, and to share your success stories, to pass on all I know about you to the people around and especially to those living in Georgia so far away from the TRNC, is my first and foremost duty.

    Therefore under the auspices of the Turkish American Cultural Association of Georgia (TACAGA), there will be an event dedicated to the memory of H.E. RRDENKTAS.

    Date: January 17, 2014
    Location: Georgia Tech, Student Center, Cypress Room, Atlanta
    Time: 6:30 p.m.

    You are all cordially invited to this event where the program will consist of a documentary, the Negotiation process, citing his poems and works, and sharing first hand memories with His Excellency. The event is organized by TACAGA and Dr. Gul Celkan.

  • The Road to Freedom

    The Road to Freedom

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    The Road to Freedom

    Assoc. Prof. Dr. Gul Celkan

                Some call it the Cyprus tragedy, the others the Cyprus drama while others refer to it as the never ending Cyprus problem,  I can assure you these tags are all wrong.  Yes, up until the year 1974, it was possible to talk about a tragedy and it was a rightful one: the Turkish Cypriots could not enjoy the privileges they were promised they would by being one of the co-founders of the Republic of Cyprus.   This dates back to the year 1960.  The British having decided to return her Crown Colony to the owners of the Island, a partnership Republic was founded between the Turkish Cypriots and the Greek Cypriots.

    At the onset, this newly established State looked promising. The president was to be a Greek Cypriot and the vice-president a Turkish Cypriot, and the Constitution granted equal rights to both sides.   Despite having a Constitution that outlaid all the rules as to how this new partnership state was going to be governed, the Greek Cypriots never forgot their ENOSIS ideals and at every opportunity they grasped, they made sure the Turkish Cypriots were deprived of all the rights and privileges endowed upon them by the Constitution.  Their ultimate goal was the annihilation of the Turkish Cypriots and be the sole owners of the island.  Their dream falls at a conflict with Turkey’s ideals on the Island of Cyprus, and therefore Turkey was always ready to defend the Turkish Cypriots.

    The Greek Cypriots never refrained from exercising genocidal attempts against the Turkish Cypriots.   Any human being who evaluates these inhumane actions of   mass murders and tortures the defenseless Turkish Cypriots on the Island have been exposed to will understand why Turkey needed to take the necessary measures so that these were never repeated again.

    It’s been almost 2 score years and ten since these atrocities against the Turkish Cypriots began, however, due to the falsified information given by the Greeks in all platforms, the outside world gives all credit to the Greeks and in a way orders the Turkish Cypriots to give up all their rights.

    I find it, at this point worthwhile quoting Gibbons, the historian, and his accounts on how the Turkish Cypriots were treated and how brutally they were killed by the Greek Cypriots. The incident I have quoted below happened in the Mathaiati Village of Nicosia where 208 Turks lived.

    “(…) three Turks were seriously injured at the first minutes. When Turks burst out of their white, small houses into the streets, the screaming and cursing crowd began to push and kick them along the way. The terrified Turks who fell down on the floor as a result of riffle butt strikes were dragged across the streets while the crowd stormed into houses, pulled burning logs out of the furnaces and set curtains and beds on fire. The old wooden roof beams were surrounded by smoke and then flames. Barefoot women mostly in nightgowns were also pushed here and there on the burning streets, either holding tight their terrified little babies or with their toddlers catching the ends of their nightgowns or trousers and following them together with others dragging their injured away.

    Greek youngsters host at the houses hysterically and yelled madly with hoarse voices. Before the flames completely covered the houses, they materialized into the houses, broken things and grabbing valuable goods. The wild sounds coming from the back of the houses attracted he attention of the assailants to the animals of Turks. They stomped into the barns and raked cows, sheep and goats with machine guns. They threw the chickens into the air and shot them while they desperately cackled and struggled. Their bodies broke into pieces and feathers covered everywhere.

    The crowd screamed and yelled in a bloodthirsty manner. Turks were dragged through the frozen streets out of the village. They were left in pain around Kochatis, another Turkish village. The Kochatis villagers hurried out of their houses to help their neighbors while the crowd headed back to Mathiati to continue the plunder and all the madness”. (H. Scott Gibbons, Peace Without Honor, Ankara, 1969, p. 31).

    Anyone who evaluates these inhumane treatments that the Turkish Cypriots suffered with a clear conscience, would most likely consent to the taking of measures so that such tragic events are no longer experienced on the island.

    It would be appropriate to mention what journalists from different nationalities witnessed during those years of strife. In January 1964, an Italian journalist in Cyprus made the following observations:

    Right now, we are witnessing the migration of Turks from their villages. The  Greek Cypriot Terror is ruthless; thousands     of   people are leaving their houses, lands and flocks. The Hellenistic claims and Plateau can not conceal these savage and barbarous behaviors. Curfew starts in Turkish villages everyday at 16:00 p.m. As soon as darkness falls, threats, weapon sounds and attempts of arson begin. Any resistance seems impossible after the Christmas slaughter which spared neither women nor kids (Giorgio Bocca, İl Giorno, 14 January 1964).

    James Rayner’s recollections of the Greek Cyprioy brutality are as follows:

    “Greek Cypriots behaved barbarously in the 20th Century, and exercised  massacres. They not only slaughtered Turks in a bloodthirsty manner but also buried them half alive. Many corpses in this mass grave unfolds the Greek brutality to the people of the world. The corpses disentombed out of the mass graves were evident of how vile Greeks were and the feudal laws that had been applied by them for years…” (Crushed Flowers, Nicosia, 1982, p. 25).

    The Greeks even after the July 20th Peace Operation did not stop their atrocities. Here is what a German tourist who was on the island on July 30th recollects from those days:

    “Human mind can not comprehend the barbarism of Greeks… Greek National Guardsmen represented extraordinary examples of brutality. They broke into Turkish houses; they ruthlessly shot women and children; cut the throats of many Turks and gathered and raped Turkish women… (Germany’s Voice, 30 July 1974).

    These are just a few of the recollections from foreign media organs.  During the 19 years that I lived in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, I had the opportunity to converse with people who had virtually been exposed to the torturous acts of the Greek Cypriots during the years before the Glorious Peace Operation of July 1974.

    One has to live and talk with the locals to have an insight into these long years of strife.  It was after the year 1963, said this retired teacher, when 300 Turkish villages were burned and thousands of Turkish Cypriots had to live in tents whether it be hot or cold, that the Greeks deprived Turkish Cypriots of getting all the supplies sent from Turkey, even medicine. Sick Turks were not given any treatment and were left to die. Even if they were in way or another hospitalized, they were never given proper treatment and left to die. Food that came from Turkey was thoroughly checked by Greek Cypriot militia before the Turkish Cypriots could have their share. In one incident, recalled this lady, a truck full of watermelon had arrived and the Greek militias made the Turkish driver empty the entire load and then reload it. They were after any kind of ammunition that could be shipped from Turkey and hidden under the melons. On a very hot summer day, the driver had to do this unloading and reloading all on his own, and the Greeks had just gazed. What else can you call this but an act of brutality, or torture?

    Each and every story I have heard was enough to send chills down my spine. Anyone who visit the TRNC should not return without seeing the Atlilar, Sandallar and Murataga mass graves.  You should note that these killings took place on August 14, 1974 the day of the second Peace Operation. The Greek Cypriots knew that all the men were at the front, so they raided these villages and killed who ever they found. The youngest they brutally murdered was a 9-day old baby, and the eldest a 109-year old man.

    During one of the visits we paid to these graves, we met a men who takes care of these sites shared his story with us. He said he was about 7 years old when all the children, women and elderly in his village were killed by the Greek Cypriot thugs and their bodies dumped into a hole that was dug for this purpose. This man, so young at the time, was hiding in a barn among the haystacks, and witnessed all these through a small window. He does recall some of these tragic incidents, and whenever he shares them, he always gets very emotional. Some people told me he sometimes just looks blankly and remembers nothing, but at others recalls everything.

    Turkish Cypriots have got a lot of memories to share; in one of my conversations with a lady she told me all the troublesome hours they lived while crossing the border from south to north the week after the Second Peace Operation, I decided to use her closing remarks as the title for this article.  Her husband was a truck driver, and would always carry goods to earn his living. They used to live in a village in the south close to the Green Line, and about a two hour drive to Guzelyurt. Following the armistice, the family decides to leave their village at night and cross the border to get to Guzelyurt as it was cleansed from Greek Cypriots and was under Turkish control. However, they were aware that they would need to cross Greek Cypriot barricades and check points. Once determined to leave, they loaded the truck with the usual goods that needed to be transported, and embarked on their deadly journey across the border. The husband knew Greek and he was well known by the Greeks. Yet the wife knew no Greek at all, and if she was to be seen, that would mean trouble. This may sound like a film scenario to some, but it’s purely fact: she wrapped herself in layers of blankets and squeezed in the space between the exhaust pipe and the truck body. She recalls being stopped several times on the way, and the truck being checked thoroughly. She also remembers that burning feeling she had all over her body as the exhaust pipe got hotter and hotter. Once they crossed the border into free land, the husband stopped the truck to free her from her hiding spot and was shocked to see parts of her body burned; however, she was still in high spirits.

    When I asked her how she managed to survive all that pain and not lose her faith, her response was short and highly emotional: “We were on ‘the Road to Freedom’ ”.

     

     

     

     

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  • The Crux of the Cyprus Problem

    The Crux of the Cyprus Problem

    The Crux of The Cyprus Problem

    His Excellency the late Founding President of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus Rauf Raif Denktas shared with me the following article on April 11, 2005 which he had authored in a special edition of the Turkish journal, Perceptions, dedicated to the Cyprus problem, just before the recommencement of the UN-sponsored proximity talks.  It is remarkable in how he refers at length to the historical background to argue his current position.


    imagesAnthony Nutting, who was the British Minister of State at the Foreign Office during the period 1954-56, wrote in his book I Saw for Myself his impression following talks with the leaders of Turkish Cypriots and Greek Cypriots:

    “There is nothing Cypriot about Cyprus except its name. In this beautiful beleaguered island you are either a Greek or a Turk. From the leaders of the two communities downwards the chasm of suspicion and hatred which separates them is frighteningly wide.”

    EOKA terrorism, which aimed to unite the island with Greece (enosis), was at its height and the Turkish Cypriots, who looked upon enosis as changing colonial masters for the worst, resisted it with every means at their disposal. Hence, the message passed on to all young Greek Cypriots was, “the struggle against the real enemy of our nation and religion, the remnants of the occupying power in Cyprus, will commence as soon as the fight for enosis comes to a successful conclusion”! Any Greek Cypriot who saw the futility and the danger of the drive for enosis, and thus supported independence as a more suitable solution, was regarded as a traitor to the national cause and murdered by EOKA (the Greek Cypriot terrorist organisation). In fact, everyone who opposed enosis was declared an enemy and lived under a constant threat. All Turkish Cypriots were against enosis!

    By 1957, inter-communal clashes assumed the character of a civil war. The suspicion and mistrust between the two communities now was fed with inter-communal blood. The British government had relinquished its policy of never abandoning Cyprus and instead began to entertain the idea of British sovereign bases in an independent island supported by Turkey and Greece as a means for Western defence. The union of the island with Greece (after being granted independence and after having exercised its right of self- determination) was to be left to a future date. In the meantime, Turkey was somehow expected to be satisfied with retaining a base in a ‘Greek Cyprus’ near her coast! The Turkish Cypriot community, who opposed enosis and therefore Greek Cypriot domination, had to be dealt with as well. In the beginning, although Britain thought that Turkey had put the Turkish Cypriots up to resist enosis (and from 1955 to the end of 1957 British Colonial administration made good use of this Turkish Cypriot anti-enosis feeling in the context of its policy of divide and rule), she later on discovered that this was not the case. What is known as the January 1958 events made Britain realise that the Turkish Cypriots were determined to resist enosis at all costs.

    On 26 and 27 January 1958, the Turkish Cypriots staged a peaceful demonstration against enosis and in favour of partition. The British responded to it by doing what they had not done to the Greek Cypriot anti-British demonstrators for three years (from 1955 to 1957): they shot dead seven Turkish Cypriots who were doing nothing unlawful. The next day, thousands of Turkish Cypriots attended a mass burial in defiance of the Colonial Government’s attempt to prevent the ceremony. The British Colonial Governor, Sir Hugh Foot, was off the island at the time. His deputy, George Sinclair, commented:

    “It is sad to say this but I believe my Government in London has just realised how serious the Turkish Cypriot community is in its opposition to enosis. A new page has been turned in our thinking!”

    By the end of 1958, Makarios and Greece realised that the Turkish Cypriot reaction to enosis, and the consequent inter- communal bloodshed (about 100 people on each side had been killed by June 1958 and Turkish Cypriots had been evacuated from about 33 mixed villages to safe areas), would bring Turkey onto the island, and partition (double self-determination) would become a reality. However, when Greece failed to get a resolution from the United Nations in favour of self-determination in December 1958, Turkey and Greece, put their heads together and worked for a solution based on bi-communal partnership! Britain agreed to endorse any agreement between the two mother countries provided her security requirementCsovereign bases on the islandCwas met!

    The Turkish and Greek governments worked out a paper that came to be known as the Zurich Agreement, and this was later endorsed by the leaders of the two communities at the London Conference in February 1959 and named the Zurich and London Agreements. These were to become, after 18 months of serious work in different committees in which both communities participated fully on the basis of equality, the Cyprus Agreements of 1960.

    The wisdom of these agreements lay in the fact that they outlawed the cardinal causes of the conflict (the Greek Cypriot demand for enosis and the counter Turkish Cypriot demand for partition) and overcame the source of Turkish Cypriot fears, being dominated by a Greek Cypriot majority. Power sharing in the joint government was arranged in such a way that the effective equal participation of both the Turkish Cypriot and the Greek Cypriot communities was assured. Furthermore, through a system of tripartite guarantees incorporated into these Agreements, Turkey, Greece and Britain were given the right to intervene together or alone in order to protect or reinstate the state of affairs in case it was threatened or disturbed.

    Executive power was assumed by the President who was elected by Greek Cypriots and the Vice-president (who had identical powers) elected by Turkish Cypriots. Each community had its own elected government (Communal Chamber) to deal with its own communal matters. The system was in fact, as experts referred to it, a functional federation and not a unitary state. Geographical separation (which the bloody years of 1955-58 had made a necessity) was thus avoided through this guaranteed system of bi-communal partnership.

    Why Did it Fail?

    By December 1963, the miracle of Zurich and London Agreements crumbled into a bloody mess on the Greek Cypriot pretext that the Constitution had proved to be unworkable! Claiming to act upon this belief. Archbishop Makarios proposed to amend 13 points of the Constitution that in his view were the sources of this unworkability. Nevertheless, he knew that the Turkish Cypriot side would not agree to his proposals because the amendments would nullify the status of the Turkish Cypriots as a co-founder partner of a partnership Republic and would reduce them into the status of a minority in a Greek Cyprus! There was no problem with the Constitution as the Greek Cypriots alleged. Makarios’s aim was to convert the partnership Republic into a Greek Cypriot republic and the decision to destroy the Republic was in fact made the moment Makarios signed the Zurich and London Agreements in 1959.

    The following is what the neutral President of the Supreme Constitutional Court, Prof. Forstoff of Heidelberg University, said on the workability of the Constitution:

    “From the moment I commenced my duties I noticed that there were allegations to the effect that the Constitution was not capable of being implemented; that revision was necessary and the like. I faced these allegations with the following thought. Every constitution can have its peculiar problems. There is no constitution in the world which has not got its particular difficulties and problems. This is primarily a question of goodwill. If there is goodwill a constitution can be implemented and this Constitution is capable of being implemented.”2

    When Forstoff made this factual statement, he did not know what we since then came to know, namely that the alleged unworkability of the Constitution was in fact a part of Makarios’s plan, devised as early as August 1960, seeking to destroy the Republic. Here is what Lieutenant-General Karayiannis of Greece, who was brought to Cyprus in order to convert his gunmen into a Greek Cypriot army in contravention of the 1960 Treaties, disclosed to an Athenian paper:

    “In the August of 1960, his patience having been exhausted by the negative stance of the Turkish Cypriots in the Cyprus Parliament and their menacing offensive for partitioning the island by surprise. President Makarios decided to proceed with the following:

    a) to organise the Greek Cypriots for battle and arm them,

    b) to proceed with the revision of the Constitution, so that, with the cancellation of the Vice-President’s veto, it would become possible to put the state into proper working order.

    First of all he put into operation a specially prepared scheme for organising the Greek Cypriots for battle. When progress with this organisation reached such a point that the opposition of the Turkish Cypriots would be deemed manageable, he would proceed next to the revision of the Constitution.

    The organisation of the Greek Cypriots for battle which was thus created and which initially bore the title ‘the organisation’, finally took the name the National Guard of Cyprus. The Minister of Interior, Polycarpos Yeorkadjis, was appointed its commander, and the President of the Parliament, Glafeos Clerides, and the Minister of Labour, Tasos Papadopoulos, as its sub-commanders …”3

    Then came to light the notorious Akritas Plan in the Greek Cypriot daily Patris of 21 April 1966, which accused Makarios of stopping short of declaring enosis when Turkish Cypriot resistance had spread all over the island as envisaged by this plan of genocide! Mr Glafcos Clerides, who was one of the architects of and active participants in this plan, as stated by General Karayiannis in the above-quoted statement, confessed in his memoirs, Cyprus: My Deposition (Vol. II), that there never was an intention of cherishing a partnership state. He used the following words:

    “Turkish Cypriots made so many concessions in 1971 that they made possible the settlement of the Cyprus question. The fact that it was Makarios himself who caused us to miss this great opportunity we had gained in 1972 is proved by the documents exchanged between the Governments of Cyprus and Greece at the time. I admit that I made a mistake by keeping silent at that time. When one writes history he has to refer to the past mistakes. Thus, for this reason, lamina position to state that it was Makarios who was responsible for the loss of this opportunity and it was he who made this mistake. Our rejection of even a certain autonomy to be given to the Turkish Cypriots and our ignorance of the recommendations of the Greek Government to the effect that we recognise it and our stating that we accepted it as a form of a veiled federation can be understood in the documents exchanged between the Governments of Cyprus and Greece “4

    And on his activities as an enosis adherent and active EOKA fighter he says:

    “I struggled for enosis and if you wish to know it, my code name within EOKA was Hiperides. I do not deny that I am an enosisist and that I fought for enosis” (From a press conference broadcast on Greek Cypriot RIK TV on 26 November 1987.)

    “I want you to know that, at this juncture, consultations are underway at the UN headquarters regarding the resolution to be adopted by the Security Council on the Cyprus issue. But in Cyprus there is already the decision taken by a President named Glafeos derides. A derides who had been given the codename Hiperides by General Grivas. Henceforth, the future course of the Cyprus issue will be decided here in Cyprus. We will not bow to pressures from the Americans and the British. We will continue our struggle, in trenches and our head-up, until the final victory of Cyprus Hellenism.”5

    If we glance at the Akritas Plan we see clearly that the Republic of 1960 had no chance of survival. Although the Turkish Cypriot side has circulated this plan to the Security Council (30 May 1978, UN Documents A/ 33/115; S/12722) no one seems to have been impressed by it. The plan outlines the political and military preparations and the way by which the world would be hoodwinked into believing that the attempt to amend the Constitution was an act of necessity made in goodwill.

    The aim was to get rid of the Treaty of Guarantee. Once this was achieved, the road to self-determination would have been unblocked. If the Turkish Cypriots had resisted the attempt to change the Constitution, they would have been given a sharp blow and the world would then have been told that this is an internal matter of Cyprus and that no one should interfere! The struggle was for enosis but the Greek Cypriots would not have revealed this until the time came. If, however, the conflict had spread, then enosis would .have been declared immediately.

    1963 Onslaught and What Went Wrong Thereafter

    A cease-fire became possible when Turkish jets flew over Nicosia on Christmas Day 1963 and when the Turkish contingent (650 men and officers from Turkey who had arrived in Cyprus on the 16 of May 1960 in compliance with the 1960 Agreements) went out of its camp, which was on the Greek Cypriot side, and proceeded to a location near the Turkish part of Nicosia. The Treaty of Guarantee was obviously very much alive and active.

    Talks between the two sides at the British High Commission under the auspices of the British Minister of the Commonwealth, Mr Duncan Sandys, came to naught and it was agreed that the two communities should attend the London Conference.

    At the London Conference, the Turkish Cypriot side received the first shock from the British. Before the Conference, Duncan Sandys had given the Turkish Cypriot leadership a signed undertaking that the representatives of both sides were to be invited to London on the basis of equality as two leaders because the Turkish The Crux ofthe Cyprus Problem Cypriot side claimed that the bi-communal government of Cyprus had collapsed and that there was no single legal representative of that government any longer. On the other hand, the British had assured Makarios that the ‘government of Cyprus’ would also be invited, and naturally, a Greek Cypriot would be its representative. At the Conference when this biased approach was discovered, the Turkish Cypriot side refused to enter the conference room until the ‘government of Cyprus’ label was removed from the text. The Greek Cypriot side continued to argue that the Constitution was no longer valid and they offered minority rights to the Turkish Cypriots. The Turkish Cypriot side accused the Greek Cypriot side of deliberately destroying the constitutional order in order to proceed to enosis and wanted a federal settlement. After six weeks of wrangling, the Conference ended with no result. The British Guarantor, instead of standing by what she had agreed to guarantee under the 1960 Agreements, advised the Turkish Cypriot representative to accede to the Greek Cypriot proposals. In this connection, Duncan Sandys in reference to Turkey stated, “it [Turkey] will never come and you will have to leave Cyprus only with your shirts on”.

    The matter was now in the hands of the Security Council which passed its 4 March 1964 Resolution (186), in which references to the ‘ ‘government of Cyprus’ were to give Makarios every chance to claim this title for the Greek Cypriot side alone. The cat was made responsible for the safety of the pigeons. Through Resolution 186, the Security Council was asking the now defunct ‘government of Cyprus’, made up solely of Greek Cypriots, to keep law and order and UNFICYP was being sent to Cyprus to help it do so! From then onwards, the Cyprus problem was solved in the eyes of the Greek Cypriot side. They believed they had achieved their national objective of converting a guaranteed partnership republic into a Greek Cypriot republic although the Turkish Cypriots never bowed to this illegality. Having been ousted from the government, the Turkish Cypriots were squeezed into enclaves (three per cent of the area of Cyprus from over 32 per cent). The Greek Cypriots declared the Constitution “dead and buried” and told the Turkish Cypriots (deprived from all sources of income, subjected to dailv harassment and nersecution) that thev income, subjected to daily harassment and persecution) that the) could only return to government if they accepted minority rights which naturally the Turkish Cypriots refused.

    The efforts of the Security Council, under the Good Office? Mission of the Secretary General, to settle the Cyprus problem as ij it were a problem between the two communities under the roof of i legitimate government, proved futile. The inter-communal talk? formula helped the Greek Cypriots to strengthen their own image as the ‘government of Cyprus’ and thus to isolate the Turkish Cypriots under illegal embargoes, portraying them to the world as a minority that demanded excessive rights from their legitimate government. No one bothered to grant that what the Turkish Cypriots were defending were their vested rights in a destroyed partnership and as one of the partners ousted from it by force of arms. They had all the right to challenge the Greek Cypriot claim to be the government of Cyprus. Indeed, what they rightfully asked for was their own share in the territory of the defunct republic (confiscated by Greek Cypriots) anc their just share in its independence and in its sovereignty, all of which the Greek Cypriots claimed solely for themselves.

    Today, we are told that the Cyprus issue has to be settled; that it has lasted for too long; that the status quo is unacceptable; that the difference between the parties can be bridged and the island be reunited; and that, after the collapse of the Berlin Wall, it is very sac to see Nicosia divided; etc. No one realises that the ‘wall’ in Cyprus prevents the Greek Cypriots from forcing their political will on the Turkish Cypriots and that the Turkish Cypriots began to live in peace and enjoy human dignity only after the Turkish intervention of 1974—an intervention which took place in compliance with Turkey’s rights as one of the Guarantor Powers. Turkey put an end to the invasion of the island of Cyprus by Greece and saved the Turkish Cypriots from total annihilation as was originally planned.

    In 1992, we have this most indicative quotation from Mr. Clerides, as published in Fileleftheros, a Greek Cypriot daily, on 20 September 1992:

    “The best solution for us is no solution. Next year we shall be where we were the last year, and the next, where we were the year before. We, the Greek Cypriots, today have the government completely under our control. We do not have the Vice-president with his veto or the three Turkish ministers in it All the ministers are Greeks. Our government is the only one internationally recognised. Why should we bring back the Turks? The Turks today control only three per cent of the land the area comprising their enclaves. They haven’t got net resources and are having difficult times because of economic atrophy. Finally they will have to accept our decisions—or go.@

    Has anything changed now to make the Greek Cypriot side more amenable to a fair settlement that safeguards the politic equality and sovereignty of the Turkish Cypriots? The world still recognises as the sole legitimate government of Cyprus an administration composed 100 per cent of Greek Cypriot people while the authenticity of the 1960 Republic of Cyprus lay in power sharing between the Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot communities on an absolutely equal basis.

    Under the false pretence of being the ‘government of Cyprus= the Greek Cypriot side is enjoying for and on behalf of Cyprus a the benefits of sovereignty and recognition. Since 1963, the da when the Turkish Cypriot community was removed from the budget of the ‘Republic of Cyprus’, all the aid sent for Cyprus to the government of Cyprus has been used for the benefit of the Greek Cypriot side. Under this false title, the Greek Cypriots are giving military bases to Greece, purchasing sophisticated armaments continuing to impose embargoes on the Turkish Cypriot people and thus to punish them for not accepting the minority rights they so generously offered in the 1960s. Hand in hand with ‘Mother Ellas’ they place obstacles to Turkey’s every move in the international arena for Turkey’s ‘sin’ of saving the Turkish Cypriots from utter annihilation and for preventing enosis, which was almost achieved.

    Makarios declared that, “by presenting to the world the Greek Cypriot administration as the ‘government of Cyprus’, he had brought Cyprus to the nearest point to enosis (and that there was) no going back from this point except for enosis”. This aim of enosis is the reason why the Greek Cypriot side has resisted every proposed settlement that underlined the guarantee system and hence blocked the road to enosis. Therefore, a new agreement with the Greek Cypriots is not possible without outlawing enosis once again and emphasising the guarantee system of 1960. Makarios’s ‘will and testament’ to his successors is that they should never sign a new agreement which incorporates these two elements. That is why Mr Clerides is repeating Makarios’s declared policy that he will hand over Cyprus to the next generation intact, as he received it from his predecessor. That is why, under the title of the ‘government of Cyprus’, the onslaught against Turkish Cypriots continues and military preparations are not reversed!

    The Greek Cypriots elected Mr Clerides the ‘President of Cyprus’ in 1993 on a ticket that rejected the UN Secretary General’s ongoing attempt to help the parties settle the Cyprus problem on the basis of a bi-zonal, bi-communal federation. Ever since, he has stood firm on this line of policy and refused to have face to face meetings with me, giving the excuse that there is no common ground between us. I pointed out to him that the Set of Ideas, which had been on the table since 1992 and on which much work had been done, formed a sufficient common ground. But he did not move from his policy of giving priority to the European Union (EU) membership, knowing that this was an impediment to any settlement. In the meantime, the EU accepted the Greek Cypriot’s unilateral and illegal application as valid for and on behalf of Cyprus in complete disregard of Turkish Cypriot objections based on legal, political and moral grounds. That the two parties had agreed to pursue EU membership after an overall settlement and subject to the approval of the two peoples through separate referendums was also ignored. All of these points were ignored by the EU, which was confronted by the blackmailing policy of Greece, which insisted that if the ‘government of Cyprus’ was not accepted as a candidate, then Greece would veto the candidacy of all the other applicants!

    The purpose of this unilateral and illegal application was made clear by the Greek Cypriot leadership as the following excerpts show:

    “If the Greek Cypriots enter the EU, this would give the Greek Cypriots major cards to play on many constitutional issues put forward at present by the Turkish Cypriots .. “6

    “The accession of Cyprus into the EU will inevitably have an impact on the 1960 Treaties of Guarantee and of Alliance and will abolish the unilateral right of Turkey to intervene in Cyprus.”7

    “Ghali’s Set of Ideas can not be put into effect. We do not accept any diversion from the principles of the EU. We do not accept a federal system that does not recognise the freedom of movement, settlement and the right to property.”8

    Indeed, the priority for the Greek Cypriot leadership was and still is the membership of the EU. In their view, what guns and embargoes have not achieved, EU membership would achieve for them! The Greek Cypriot side’s sole intention is to retain the title of the ‘government of Cyprus’ and, as long as they are allowed to continue with it, they shall not be motivated for a mutually acceptable solution. Furthermore, they are determined to go to any length to hold on to their unjustly acquired status.

    The treatment of the Greek Cypriot aggressor as the ‘government of Cyprus’ for so many years has eliminated any motivation on the part of the Greek Cypriot side to seek a new compromise based on equality and realismCpower sharing on the basis of two existing states. His Excellency Kofi Annan, the Secretary General of the UN, brought Mr Clerides and myself together at Troutbeck, New York, and in Glion, Switzerland, in July and August 1997. There I underlined the Turkish Cypriot position vis-a-vis the EU’s unacceptable interference in the inter-communal talks. Mr Clerides, now confident that the dice had been cast in his favour and that no one could prevent the process of EU membership, was bold enough to tell his own press that he attended the inter- communal talks for tactical reasons and that no one should be worried that he would be making unnecessary concessions to the Turkish Cypriot side. “I attend these talks”, he said, “for tactical reasons. Our tactic is to say ‘yes’ to whatever the other side says ‘no’ in order to project the other side as intransigent. The tactic has been very successful so far, so we shall continue with it”.

    At the talks, I asked him how he reconciled what he was doing in Cyprus with the efforts we were making at the inter-communal talks in order to settle the problem. I underlined the importation of Russian missiles, the giving of military bases to Greece, the importation of heavy and sophisticated arms, and the unilateral application for EU membership. In this connection, I pointed out to Mr derides that the Greek Cypriot application for EU membership not only contravened the 1960 Agreements but was also contrary to what was envisaged by the UN Secretary General in his Set of Ideas: namely, that a joint application for EU membership would be made after a settlement and after discussions and agreement by both sides. Furthermore, each side would submit such an agreement I democratic approval in separate referenda. Mr Vasiliou and I had, the time, accepted the course suggested by the UN Secretary General. How could he reconcile the fact that they were now attempting undo the most cardinal part of a future settlement (which, again, be sides had discussed and accepted in principle), namely that of t global exchange of property between the two sides, by promising t Greek Cypriot refugees that they would all go back to the properties, knowing well that half of the Turkish Cypriot population (refugees from the South), would never go back to their properties view of what had been done to them until the arrival of Turkey in 1974.

    Mr Clerides was to the point in his answer to me:

    “All these matters you have raised are governmental act Governmental acts do not stop just because inter-communal talks are on. These activities shall continue.”

    When I asked him whether he meant that he was the ‘President of the Turkish Cypriot Administration’ also and, hence, that I had no right to raise these issues at the talks, he made the following statement in the presence of Mr Diego Cordovez, the UN Secretary General’s Special Representative:

    “I know I am not the President of the Turkish Cypriot Administration and that I do not represent them. But the whole world treats me as such; do you expect me to say that I am not?@

    Clerides had thus hit the nail right on the head. As lone as h< derides had thus hit the nail right on the head. As long as he was treated as the ‘President of the whole of Cyprus’, he would continue to hide behind this false title and try to achieve what they had failed to achieve through violence and oppression.

    I replied: “I don’t expect you, Mr derides, to tell the world that you know you are not the ‘President of the whole of Cyprus’, but I expect Mr Cordovez to tell the world and through him the Security Council members and the EU members that you know you are not the ‘President of the whole of Cyprus’ and, therefore, you should not be treated as such!”

    Mr Cordovez and the UN Secretary General who appointed him were of course prevented by their mandate from saying so. The 4 March 1964 resolution was their excuse for saying that their mandate is to facilitate talks between the two communities subject to the existence of a legitimate government of Cyprus. Fiction rather than reality is the basis of their mandate and it appears that the Security Council cannot be told by the Secretary General what the facts in Cyprus are! Thus, the aggressor in Cyprus is encouraged in its policy of doing everything possible to usurp the rights, liberties and the equal political status of the Turkish Cypriots. Aggression against Cyprus and the attempt to convert it into a totally Greek Cypriot republic, are thus being facilitated by the refusal of the international family of nations to diagnose the Cyprus issue correctly before presenting remedies for its resolution. The Greek Cypriot side does not want an agreement that would satisfy the Turkish Cypriot side as a sovereign equal in all respects. But this is what Turkish Cypriots are! What Greek Cypriot leaders want is to retain the title of the ‘government of Cyprus’ at all costs and thus eventually have Cyprus for themselves in complete disregard of what President Clinton stated: “Cyprus has two owners, Turkish Cypriots and Greek Cypriots.” This brutal illegal attempt, now in its thirty-sixth year, to rob Turkish Cypriots of all their rights and status is the cause of the Cyprus issue. Unless this is tackled with courage, the Greek Cypriot side will naturally try to get away with usurping the whole of Cyprus.

    Insisting on having the right to extend their authority over the North is tantamount to claiming territory without having the proper legitimate title to it and is an indication of the continuation of the Greek Cypriot policy of colonising the Turkish Cypriot people. All these attempts and overtly criminal acts, persisting since 1963, have not improved the “frighteningly wide chasm of suspicion and hatred” that Mr Anthony Nutting found to exist between the two communities back in 1956. Now, the dangers of future conflict are greater than ever because the Greek Cypriot youth is not told what their elders did to the Turkish Cypriots during the 1963-1974 period; the Greek Cypriot youth does not know that today’s seeds of complete separation were sown by their leaders back in 1963 when they tried to take over Cyprus by force of arms. The Greek Cypriot youth, believing that Cyprus was a prosperous and peaceful island until 1974, when Turkey came and pushed them out of their homes, naturally is not prone to a fair settlement. Had they been told the truth, the Greek Cypriot youth would soon see that their leaders made the division and that the Turkish Cypriots are fully justified in being reluctant to establish a paper partnership anew when it can be declared unworkable at the will of the Greek Cypriots. They would then be able to understand why the Turkish Cypriots insist on a formula based on the existence of two states.

    Destined to share a common land with the Greek Cypriot people, after 36 years of separation, the Turkish Cypriot people still cherish the idea of a state to state partnership.

    These are the realities of Cyprus. I would not have gone into the past had the Greek Cypriot side not based its case on the events of 1974 and accused Turkey of invading their land. Turkey saved the Turkish Cypriot people together with the Turkish Cypriots’ land and share in the independence and sovereignty of Cyprus. Greek Cypriots succeeded in destroying the 1960 partnership, but they failed to destroy the Turkish Cypriot partner who safeguarded its rights and status at great loss of life and property. That is why at Glion, when Mr Clerides, having declared the demise of the inter-communal talks in which he claimed he had never put his trust. I could do nothing better than thank him for his out-spokenness and tell him that from now on I would talk with him on the basis of real equality from state to state. That is how my confederation proposal of 31 August 1998* came to the fore. This is a realistic partnership proposal which would enable both sides to co-operate in peace and harmony and also by addressing the legitimate interests of all sides for longer term stability. It is also consistent with the efforts of the UN to reach a mutually acceptable settlement. The beginnings of federations have usually been confederal agreements between two equals. The Cyprus issue can not be settled by disregarding the events of 1963- 1974; this is a time for a proper diagnosis of the problem. The old formula of inter-communal talks has only helped the Greek Cypriot side to bolster its image as the ‘government of Cyprus’ thus leaving no motivation for a new power sharing between two sovereign equals. But that is what the Cyprus issue is about.


    * The text of the proposal is as follows:

    “As a final effort-to achieve a mutually acceptable lasting solution in Cyprus, I propose the establishment of the Cyprus Confederation based on the following arrangements:

    1. A special relationship between Turkey and TRNC on the basis of agreements to be concluded.

    2. A similar special relationship, between Greece and the Greek Cypriot Administration on the basis of symmetrical agreements to be concluded.

    3. Establishment of a Cyprus confederation between TRNC and GCA.

    4. The 1960 Guarantee System shall continue.

    5. The Cyprus Confederation may, if parties jointly agree, pursue a policy of accession to the EU. Until Turkey’s full membership to the EU, a special arrangement will provide Turkey with the full rights and obligations of an EU member with regard to the Cyprus Confederation.

    The ultimate aim of the negotiations will thus be a partnership settlement which will be a confederated structure composed of two peoples and of two states of the Island supported by symmetrical agreements with the two respective Motherlands and Guarantor States. All rights and powers which are not referred to the confederal entity will reside with the two confederated states. Any agreement to be reached as a result of the negotiations will be submitted for approval in separate referenda.

    By participating in these negotiations the parties will acknowledge that the Greek and Turkish Cypriot sides are two sovereign and equal states, each with its own functioning democratic institutions and jurisdiction, reflecting the political equality and will of their respective peoples. They will also acknowledge that the authorities of one party do not represent the other. We believe that only this structure,

    a) will provide for the security of both sides,

    b) will safeguard their identity and well being. If the Greek Cypriots agree to this final basis, we are ready to begin negotiations to establish the Cyprus Confederation.”


     

     

     

  • Remembering ATATURK

    Remembering ATATURK

     

     gul3

     

    Remembering Ataturk

     

    Assoc. Prof. Dr. Gul Celkan

     

    It was 75 years ago on this day that the clocks stopped ticking, life came to a stall, the whole nation was in mourning after the loss of this Great Man, our Founding Father, the Father of the Turks, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

    No other nation in the entire world has enjoyed such a leader, a great visionary who had devoted his whole life to the emancipation of his country from foreign rule.  The Ottoman Empire had surrendered to the western powers hence allowing them to settle on Anatolian soil just for the sake of keeping the throne. The Sultan was not aware that he would lose all his power since the Sevr Treaty meant complete surrender.

     Mustafa Kemal emerged as a great commander in Gallipoli defeating the foreign powers with a handful of army who fought to defend their own land.  His military skills and confidence in the Turkish soldiers led to victory.

    Following the defeat of the Ottoman Empire and its allies during World War I, the attempt of the victorious allies to control the Anatolian territory could not be accepted by Mustafa Kemal Pasha, and this led to wage war against all the occupying powers that is known as the Turkish War of Independence. During the four years of this epic war, women fought with ardor for their national liberation alongside the men, not just by providing support for the battle front, but also taking such roles as press advisor, interpreter and spokesperson. There are countless documents today that convey the tremendous contribution of women during this Great War, which ended with victory in 1923.

    Following the proclamation of the Republic on October 29, 1923,  Ataturk,  with abiding faith in the vital importance of women in society, launched many reforms to give Turkish women equal rights and opportunities.

    Among all the reforms he launched to make Turkey a modern and secular country, Ataturk attached utmost significance to the emancipation as well as the education of women.

    On one occasion, he said, “It is our women who operated the life sources of the army made up of our men…” hence expressing the selfless work of women during the War.

    Ataturk incessantly repeated on all occasions that it was the Turkish  women who had prepared the means of living in the country, adding, “do let us cherish and honor forever these women of great souls and high feeling.”

    Isn’t it ironical that while celebrating the 90th anniversary of the proclamation of our Republic, all our gains have started to be taken away from us, depriving us all the privileges granted to us by Ataturk through his Reforms?

    “It is woman who gives man the earliest words of advise and education and who exercises on him the initial influences of motherhood,” and therefore abolishing ignorance is the only true path to salvation.

    Ataturk, having traveled across Anatolia, witnessed first hand women’s attire and expressed his observations  by stating that , ‘Not in villages but in towns and cities I saw our women friends cover their faces and eyes closely and carefully. Friends, this is partly due to our selfishness…our women are as intelligent and thinking people like us…”

    More than 80 years ago Ataturk had said,  “Do let them show their faces to the world…let them see the world closely through  their eyes. There is nothing to fear about that…In some other places I see women covering their heads thereby hiding their faces and turn their back to the men passing by and sitting on the ground huddling up. Tell me gentlemen. What’s the meaning of this attitude?’

    And currently, what a tragedy is it that women have started to cover themselves up, wear the turban, cover up their whole bodies with those ominous looking black sheets.  Where are we heading to? Turkey, up until ten years ago, was a country that was living up to the western standards of the civilized world, and governed by secular principles.

    Why had Ataturk implemented all those Reforms?  “Reforms mean to demolish the institutions that caused the Turkish nation to fall behind.  The nation is to advance according to the highest civilized principles..”   Aren’t we forced to deviate from these principles now?  And perhaps even worse than that  the society is pushed into abandoning all of them and adopting religious laws.  This is due to the fact that there is a government that believes religious norms should be followed in running the country, and hence they have integrated religion to education, to our daily lives. The culminating point was when the women wearing the turban found their way into the Parliament.

    ATATURK had encouraged women to take up teaching as a profession since this position commands great respect in Turkey and many of the “new women” of Turkey went like pioneers to the remoter parts of the country, teaching in the schools and teaching the Principles of Ataturk and of the New Secular Turkish Republic.”

    Being granted the right to vote and to be elected as early as the year 1934, Turkish women started to have a say in the government.  Ataturk had expressed his great happiness upon seeing the women representatives in the Parliament  as such:  “ I WISH THE TURKISH WOMEN GREAT SUCCESS IN THE POLITICAL SPHERE INTO WHICH SHE HAS JUST ENTERED.”

    Ataturk, the man who inspired so many free nations across the globe, wanted the Turkish women to acquire the same social status as men believing men and women had to co-exist, support and help each other…”  When we think of the current situation, it is highly heartbreaking to see that all these privileges like going to school together, working together, sharing responsibilities are about to become history.

    With Ataturk, Turkey benefited from a leadership that gave inspiration to the Turkish nation, farsightedness in the understanding of the modern world and last but not least courage and power.   In no other country have women advanced this rapidly.  Yet how ironic it is that present day Turkish women are suppressed by their male counterparts.  However, being close followers of ATATURK’s principles and being aware that we owe our existence to him,  we, the emancipated women of Turkey will not allow religion to intervene in our daily lives, and keep up with the western standards.

    THE TURKISH NATION WILL NEVER FORGET YOU, MUSTAFA KEMAL ATATURK,  THE GREATEST LEADER OF ALL TIME.

    WE EXIST IN A FREE, SOVEREIGN AND SECULAR COUNTRY THANKS TO YOU.

    WE SHALL NEVER DEVIATE FROM YOUR PRINCIPLES AND THEY WILL ALWAYS BE OUR GUIDING LIGHT.