Tag: rule of law

  • HAPPY DAY

    HAPPY DAY

    avni-mutlu-3
    Governor Mutlu (Governor Happy)

    MONDAY, GOVERNOR HAPPY’S HAPPIEST DAY, TURKEY’S WORST.

    ON MONDAY, AUGUST  5, TURKISH DEMOCRACY WILL DIE IN PUBLIC, STRIPPED NAKED BY THE FORCES OF FASCISM AND TREASON. ALL APPROPRIATE AND DISPROPORTIONATE VIOLENCE WILL BE RENDERED.

    THE BIGGEST LEGAL FIASCO IN HISTORY, ONE CALLED ERGENEKON, WILL BE DECIDED BY JUDGES WHO HAVE SPENT YEARS SLEEPING AT THE BENCH. IN BIZARRE HARMONY, THE HAPLESS ACCUSED HAVE SPENT YEARS IN PRISON AWAITING THEIR RIGHT TO A SPEEDY TRIAL DUE TO DELAYS IN THE GATHERING, TAMPERING, POLLUTING AND CREATION OF EVIDENCE. COMPLICATING MATTERS FURTHER, SECRET WITNESSES HAD REMAINED SO SECRETIVE THAT THEY WERE DIFFICULT TO LOCATE AND COMPENSATE. THUS DIRECT CONFRONTATION AND EXAMINATION BY DEFENSE COUNSELS WAS NOT AVAILABLE. 

    BUT THIS MONDAY, THIS BLOODY MONDAY, WILL BE THE DAY THAT JUSTICE SPEAKS GIBBERISH AND ALLTHE CLOCKS IN TURKEY RUN BACKWARDS. ALL PEOPLE WHO BELIEVED IN THE RULE OF LAW WILL GATHER IN PUBLIC DISBELIEF AT THE ABSURD VERDICT RENDERED BY ABSURD JUDGES EDUCATED AT THE ALICE IN WONDERLAND SCHOOL OF LAW. 

    THE GOVERNOR OF ISTANBUL, A MAN NAMED HAPPY, HAS HAPPILY BUT UNDEMOCRATICALLY BANNED ALL GATHERINGS, DEMONSTRATIONS, CHANCE MEETINGS, AND SOCIAL DATES BETWEEN BEAUTIFUL WOMEN AND HANDSOME MEN WITHIN 15,000 KILOMETERS OF THE COURT, WHICH IS LOCATED AT THE PRISON. UNHAPPILY NAMED SILIVRI, THE PRISON IS IN FACT 380,000 KILOMETERS (ON AVERAGE) FROM THE EARTH ON THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON. SOMEWHAT PARADOXICALLY, GOVERNOR HAPPY CONFIDENTLY CLAIMS TO BE A LAWYER. 

    TO CHEER AND HASTEN THE CITIZENRY ON ITS COLLECTIVE WAY TO DISBELIEF AND DESPAIR, GOVERNOR HAPPY HAS ASSEMBLED DIVISIONS OF ROBOCOPS TO SQUEEZE PEPPER GAS AND BATTALIONS OF RUBBER-BULLET MARKSMEN TO LACERATE FOREHEADS AND DESTROY EYE SOCKETS. SINCE THE WEATHER WILL BE SEASONABLY HOT, THE EVER HELPFUL HAPPY WILL GATHER HIS COLORFUL FLEETS OF ACID WATER SPRAY TRUCKS TO REFRESH THE BY NOW BEATEN, BRUISED AND SEMICONSCIOUS CITIZENS OF WHAT WAS ONCE CALLED THE REPUBLIC OF TURKEY, A SECULAR NATION OPERATING UNDER THE RULE OF LAW.

    MONDAY, BLOODY MONDAY, THE SADDEST OF ALL POSSIBLE DAYS.

    Cem Ryan
    Istanbul, the unhappiest of cities in the unhappiest of countries
    4
    August 2013

    “It was a cold, bright day in April and the clocks were striking thirteen.”
    1984, George Orwell

     

     

  • Turkey’s top general offers new vision of military, democracy and secularism

    Turkey’s top general offers new vision of military, democracy and secularism

    Turkish General Ilker Basbug is offering a new take on the military’s support for pluralistic democracy.

    By Ayhan Simsek for Southeast European Times in Ankara — 16/04/09

    Turkish General Ilker Basbug at the War Academy in Istanbul on Tuesday (April 14th). [Getty Images]
    Turkish General Ilker Basbug at the War Academy in Istanbul on Tuesday (April 14th). Getty Images
    Chief of Staff General Ilker Basbug offered a new vision of the military’s role in Turkish society during a speech at Istanbul’s War Academy on Tuesday (April 14th). Addressing a largely academic audience, which included Turkey’s future military leaders, Basbug redefined secularism and rejected an ethnically based definition of Turkish citizenship.

    He also reaffirmed the military’s strong commitment to a “pluralistic” democracy and pledged to look into “civil-military relations, the fight against terrorism, democracy and secularism from an academic perspective”.

    Because the military views itself as the ultimate guardian of Turkey’s secular system, it has had an uneasy relationship with the Islamist-rooted ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). Following the AKP’s electoral victory in 2002, the military’s rhetoric intensified. It opposed AKP candidate and current President Abdullah Gul’s nomination in 2007.

    However, its strident rhetoric proved counterproductive; the AKP made gains in the 2007 early elections.

    Complicating the military’s position is the ongoing Ergenekon probe, which has led police to detain nearly 200 suspects, including retired generals and active military, for allegedly plotting against the AKP government. Illegal wiretaps leaked to government-friendly media have added to the atmosphere of fear.

    Basbug’s remarks echo secularists’ concerns about the AKP’s increasing “authoritarian” tendencies after its 2007 electoral victory. They argue the Ergenekon case has turned into a tool for intimidating AKP opponents.

    To address these concerns, Basbug emphasised the importance of the separation of powers, the rule of law and an independent judiciary as pillars of pluralistic democracy. In past statements, generals unceasingly underlined the threat of fundamentalism and expressed determination to protect secularism at all costs.

    But Basbug said the military “has never been and will never be against religion”. He differentiated between devout Muslims and religion-centred groups who use Islam for their personal or political interests.

    “The thought that religion may become a tool to attain objectives is the greatest injury to be inflicted on religion itself,” Basbug said. He vowed the general staff would not fail, within the bounds of the law, to resist efforts to damage the military.

    Milliyet columnist Fikret Bila interpreted Basbug’s remarks as aiming to change perceptions of the military among devout Muslims. But they are also a warning to religion-centred interest groups.

    Basbug said such groups have orchestrated a media campaign to feed “prejudices” against the military. To counteract that alleged effort, it has loosened its accreditation rules. Present at the War Academy were journalists who previously could not gain accreditation.

    “This speech represents a paradigm shift in the Turkish General Staff. These openings are the first steps. It is better to support them with constructive criticism rather than simply looking down on them,” CNN Turk TV commentator Ali Saydam said.

    This content was commissioned for SETimes.com
    Source:  www.setimes.com, 16.04.2009