Strange
to see the NYT talk about human rights unless they are talking about
an enemy. Perhaps we need to read between the lines
E.U.
Woos Turkey for Refugee Help, Ignoring Rights Crackdown
Demonstrators were hit by tear gas in front of the offices of the Turkish daily newspaper Zaman in Istanbul on Saturday. The authorities raided the newspaper.
8
March, 2016
ISTANBUL
— The contrast was jarring: Just days after the police broke into
the offices of an opposition newspaper using tear gas and water
cannon, Turkey’s prime minister was greeted in Brussels with offers
of billions in aid, visa-free travel for Turks in Europe and renewed
prospects for joining the European Union.
The
juxtaposition highlighted the conundrum Europe faces as it seeks
solutions to its worst refugee crisis since World War II. To win
Turkey’s desperately needed assistance in stemming the flow of
migrants to the Continent, European officials seem prepared to ignore
what critics say is President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s steady march
toward authoritarianism.
It
is a moment of European weakness that the Turkish leadership seems
keen to capitalize on. As Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu arrived in
Brussels this week he upped the ante, asking for more financial aid
than was previously negotiated and demanding visa-free travel by
June, while offering to take back some migrants who have crossed into
Europe.
The
Turkish offer was hailed as a “breakthrough” Tuesday by Angela
Merkel, the German chancellor, and Donald Tusk, the president of the
European Council, spoke about a “common understanding” between
Europe and Turkey. They said they hoped to work out the details at a
summit meeting on March 17 and 18.
Yet
criticism of Turkey’s media crackdown was mild, with President
François Hollande of France saying, “cooperation with Turkey
doesn’t mean we should not be extremely vigilant about press
freedom.”
The
refugee crisis — more than a million people fleeing war and
hardship in the Middle East and beyond have landed on Europe’s
shores — has significantly shifted the balance of power between
Turkey and Europe. Membership in the European Union was once seen as
a carrot to induce Turkey to push through democratic reforms. Now it
is offered as an enticement for Turkish help contain the flow of
refugees, with Europe, critics say, choosing to set aside its values
to secure Turkish cooperation.
“More
rights and freedoms for people in Turkey has been the reason why I
supported accession,” said Marietje Schaake, a Dutch member of the
European Parliament. But nowadays, she said, “we see the trading
away of principles in the mere hope of solutions to Europe’s own
challenges in dealing with asylum seekers and migrants.”
In
addition to the media crackdown, critics have been concerned by the
renewed fighting in Turkey’s southeast between the army and Kurdish
insurgents. They say Europe should do more to push the two sides to
return to peace talks.
Selahattin
Demirtas, the top Kurdish political leader, whose party for the first
time won representation in Parliament in elections last year, said
the refugee crisis had led Europe to be largely silent on the renewed
war in the southeast. He criticized Europe for bowing to Turkey’s
demands, and not taking a tougher line with Ankara on its domestic
troubles.
“Blackmailing
European countries in turn for the refugee crisis, this is something
that the European Union should not close their eyes to,” Mr.
Demirtas told reporters on Monday. “The European Union should see
this as blackmailing, and this is not in line with European values.”
In
previous years the membership talks between Turkey and the European
Union led to more democracy within Turkey, analysts say. To put
itself more in line with European values, Turkey has abolished the
death penalty, legalized education and news broadcasts in the Kurdish
language, granted more rights to non-Muslim minorities and curbed the
influence of the military over politics. Now that is shifting.
“E.U.-Turkey
relations today are merely transactional,” said Mustafa Akyol, a
Turkish columnist who sometimes contributes to The New York Times.
“We can give you this, you can give us that. You take back some
refugees, we give you free visas. It is not about Turkey becoming an
E.U.-style liberal democracy.”
Mr.
Erdogan, Turkey’s pre-eminent political figure since 2003, once
embraced democratic reforms in the hopes of obtaining European Union.
membership. But in recent years, as those hopes faded, the early
gains were reversed. There was a tough crackdown on government
protesters in the summer of 2013. There was a corruption
investigation that prompted the government to purge the judiciary and
police of perceived enemies. And there has been the erosion of press
freedoms.
Now,
rather than being the leader of a glittering Islamic democracy, Mr.
Erdogan, who remains extremely popular among his religiously
conservative base, is often compared to Vladimir V. Putin, the leader
of Russia — an authoritarian leader with little regard for freedom
of expression.
Underscoring
this pivot in Turkey, even as Mr. Davutoglu was meeting with European
leaders on Monday, the Turkish authorities, backed by a court order,
moved to seize the Cihan News Agency, a news media outlet that like
Zaman, which was seized last week, is linked to the Muslim cleric
Fethullah Gulen, a rival of Mr. Erdogan’s who lives in exile.
And
as the talks were progressing in Brussels on Monday, Mr. Erdogan, in
a speech in Ankara, denounced the Europeans for failing to deliver on
their pledge of more than $3 billion of aid for refugees.
“They
promised to give us three billion euros, and four months have passed
since then,” he said. “The prime minister is in Brussels right
now. I hope he returns with that money, the three billion euros.”
Activists,
press freedom advocates and Turkish liberals who once counted on the
prospect of European Union membership to bring about more democratic
reforms have reacted with despair to Europe’s muted criticism of
what they see as Turkey’s increasingly anti-democratic behavior.
“Is
the E.U. determined to let itself be humiliated?” Christophe
Deloire, the secretary-general of the advocacy group Reporters
Without Borders, asked in a statement on Monday. He noted that
Turkey’s seizure of the daily newspaper Zaman came last week as Mr.
Tusk was on a visit to Ankara.
Svante
Cornell, a Turkey analyst and director of the Central Asia-Caucasus
Institute, a research organization, said the various crackdowns on
the news media “illustrate fully the charade that E.U.-Turkey
relations have become."
“The
timing of Turkey’s move against Zaman was ostentatious,” he said,
“suggesting Erdogan’s government is not even trying to pretend to
live up to European norms and values.”
This
week Zaman, now overseen by court-appointed trustees, quickly shifted
from a steadfast critic of the government to a voice of support, a
transformation neatly illustrated by Tuesday’s front page headlines
about the summit meeting in Brussels.
“A
green light from the E.U. for Turkey’s demands,” one read, while
another celebrated that “the path to visa-free travel in Europe
opens.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.