Turkish Daily News, 96-05-21
From: Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs <http://www.mfa.gov.tr>
TURKISH DAILY NEWS 21 May 1996
CONTENTS
[01] Parliament speaker reacts against DYP-RP cooperation
[02] Turkey sees no enthusiasm in Switzerland over ties
[03] Turkey speeds up preparations for Habitat II summit
[01] Parliament speaker reacts against DYP-RP cooperation
Kalemli: 'They cannot decide to suspend motions. The eight
motions belong not to them but to the Parliament from now on'
By Kemal Balci
TDN Parliamentary Office
ANKARA- The agreement between the ruling True Path Party
(DYP) and the opposition Welfare Party (RP), who were recently
engaged in a duel of motions, to suspend debate on the motions
until after the June 2 local elections, has caused a legal debate.
According to the constitution, the eight motions which the two
parties introduced against their respective party chairmen should
be debated in Parliament within a month.
Constitutional experts indicate that Parliament will have to vote
on an RP motion by May 26 to decide whether a new inquiry will
be carried out into DYP Chairwoman Tansu Ciller.
The timetable set by the DYP and RP, which came as a result of
a cease-fire between the two parties, calls for this motion to
be dealt with after June 2. However, this exceeds the one-month
time limit set by the constitution.
Parliament Speaker Mustafa Kalemli told the TDN that motions belonged
to the Parliament once they were submitted. "The necessary
procedures will definitely be carried out," Kalemli argued.
Kalemli, following his meetings with the parliamentary group chairmen
of the parties, had previously announced that they had decided
to debate the motions against Ciller and RP Chairman Necmettin
Erbakan on May 21 and 23.
Kalemli had also said that he would leave it to the DYP and the
RP to decide on which leader they wanted dealt with first.
However, in a recent development, RP parliamentary group chairman
Sevket Kazan and DYP parliamentary group chairman Saffet Arikan
Beduk decided that the issue should be postponed until after the
June 2 local elections.
Kalemli told the TDN that it was still not clear when this one-month
deadline would expire and thus he would consult with the Parliament's
legal experts.
"The motion against Ciller was submitted on April 26. However,
Parliament was informed of it later. So it is not certain which
of the dates should be accepted as the start of the one-month
period," Kalemli indicated.
Noting that he would take the issue to the Consultation Council
and also discuss it with party rulers, Kalemli said that he would
give an exact date later on.
Parliament Speaker Kalemli also is keeping close watch on the
political developments which emerged following the recent Constitutional
Court ruling which said that the vote of confidence received by
the government was invalid.
A day after the ruling, after visiting Chairman of the Constitutional
Court Yekta Gungor Ozden, Kalemli said that he considered it unnecessary
to hold a new vote of confidence or votes on the extension of
emergency rule in the Southeast and the mandate of the Provide
Comfort force.
Kalemli is known to have discussed the issue with President Suleyman
Demirel.
Talking to TDN, Kalemli stressed that he was the kind of person
who would not make any comment before talking with all the relevant
people and institutions.
"This was also the case with my remarks over the constitutional
court's ruling. I consulted with the professors of law before
expressing my ideas. However, after I expressed my ideas some
professors opposed them and some shared my ideas. They are not
in consensus. So I still believe in what I said. In my opinion
there is no need for the government to seek a new vote of confidence.
There is also no need to vote again on the extension of emergency
rule and the Provide Comfort force. The debate over the issue
will be over once the reasons behind the ruling are made public
in the Official Gazette anyway," Kalemli said.
In a separate development, the DYP's coalition partner Motherland
Party (ANAP) also voiced its opposition to the alliance between
the RP and DYP and urged that the motions be debated before the
June 2 local elections.
ANAP parliamentary group chairman Murat Baseskioglu said onMonday
that the motion regarding a probe into Ciller's personal assets
should be discussed at Parliament by May 26 because it was submitted
on April 26.
Referring to the changes made to the parliamentary regulations
last week, Baseskioglu said that the new article was clear and
that it called for the debates over the motions to be finalized
in Parliament within a month.
However, the DYP's acting group chairman, Ali Riza Gonul, opposed
Baseskioglu, saying that the general assembly was informed of
the motion on May 7 and thus this should be the date to start
the countdown.
(TDN, 21.05.1996, page 1)
[02] Turkey sees no enthusiasm in Switzerland over ties
'Double standards' toward resident Turks and Kurds, plus 'hostile
remarks' by Foreign Minister Flavio Cotti are seen as indicators
of a lack of will for improved relations
By Semih D. Idiz
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Turkey sees a discernible lack of political will
on Switzerland's part for improved relations, even though a rapprochement
is meant to be in force following an incident in 1994 involving
Kurdish demonstrators which resulted in the withdrawal of ambassadors
by the two sides.
Reliable sources indicate that as in 1994 part of the problem
today stems from what officials in Ankara see as a "blatant
double standard" employed by Swiss authorities in their approach
to Kurds and Turks living in Switzerland.
Continuing pointed remarks by Swiss Foreign Minister Flavio Cotti,
interpreted as "attempts at vilifying Turkey," are,
however, being taken as the prime indicator of Berne's lack of
enthusiasm in its ties with Ankara.
Diplomatic soundings by the Turkish side, both in Ankara and in
Berne, to gauge the depth of the political will for improved relations
with Turkey are also said to have produced "cool responses."
Ties with Switzerland, already strained over the Kurdish and human
rights issues, hit rock-bottom in June 1993 when a Kurdish demonstrator
was killed by a shot fired from within the Turkish Embassy compound
in Berne which supporters of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)
were trying to storm.
The Turkish ambassador to Berne, Kaya Toperi, said later that
embassy staff had fired into the air to prevent the protesters.
He accused the Swiss police of taking too long to react. The Turkish
side maintained the protestor killed had died from a ricocheting
bullet.
Toperi subsequently refused Swiss demands to search the embassy
and to allow staff members to be questioned. Things came to a
head when Berne demanded Toperi's immunity be lifted for questioning.
Categorically refusing this, Ankara recalled Toperi for "consultations"
and also pulled back two staff members.
Turkey then served notice to the Swiss ambassador in Ankara, Paul
Andre Ramseyer, along with two attaches, to leave the country
in one week.
Attempts at normalizing ties began to yield fruit only 18 months
after these incidents when the two countries agreed to exchange
ambassadors again. But sources indicate that ties have not in
fact been put on a proper footing as of yet, despite occasional
words form the two sides to the effect that all is on track in
Turkish-Swiss relations.
One point Ankara has been noting as debilitating to full normalization
is "the clear double standard" employed by Swiss authorities
when it comes to the activities of Turkish and Kurdish groups
in that country.
"Turkish groups who merely want to celebrate `Turkish evenings'
are not given permission by the authorities on the grounds that
there is a security risk," one source told the Turkish Daily
News.
"In stark contrast to this though, Kurdish groups, many of
them known by the Swiss themselves to be front organizations for
the PKK, are given permission for all their meetings," the
source added.
The PKK is outlawed in Turkey -- where it is waging a bloody separatist
campaign. It is also outlawed in number of Western countries,
including Germany and the United States, who consider the PKK
to be a dangerous terrorist organization.
Pointing out that almost all of these Kurdish meetings in Switzerland
"have one theme, and that is to attack Turkey," this
source said, "Switzerland in recent times has more or less
become the headquarters for all of the PKK's front organizations."
"There is a belief in Ankara that the bad atmosphere in relations
following the Toperi affair should long since have been overcome,
and that Turkey should be well on the way to having good and stable
relations with Switzerland," the source added.
"But there is a discernible lack of political will for this
on the other side and this appears to be demonstrated mostly in
the what amounts to an ingrained prejudice by (Swiss foreign minister)
Cotti towards Turkey."
The first sign of a lack of enthusiasm on the Swiss part for significantly
improved ties, as far as Ankara is concerned, came early in 1995,
shortly after the two countries exchanged ambassadors, when Foreign
Minister Cotti, using highly undiplomatic language, called for
a commission to be established by European countries to investigate
allegations of human rights abuses in Turkey.
When Russia's membership of the Council of Europe was being debated
in the Swiss Parliament later in the year, Cotti was in favor,
arguing that if a country like Turkey, that systematically abuses
human rights, is a council member, then there was no reason for
not allowing Russia in.
What is reportedly angering Ankara in all this is not that Cotti
may be strong on human rights, but that he has no consistent record
on this, as exemplified in his self-avowed enthusiasm for developing
ties with China.
"What Ankara sees when it looks at the whole picture is nothing
short of personal prejudice," the source informing the TDN
said.
Judging by these remarks, officials in Ankara merely want to verify
if this is the case or not. If so they clearly do not want bother
to waste much time and effort with trying to improve ties with
Switzerland, which, at any rate, is considered a "marginal
country" by diplomatic analysts as far as Turkish political
interests are concerned.
Asked, on the other hand, if there are no "economic or commercial
liabilities" attached to less than perfect political ties
with Switzerland, sources in Ankara reflected a lack of concern
on the grounds that "economics and commerce have their own
logic anyway."
"No Swiss company is going to shoot itself in the foot and
pull out of the Turkish market because the Swiss government has
bad political ties with Ankara or because the Swiss foreign minister
does not like Turkey," one source said.
Turkish analysts indicated that the only liability was in the
defense industry sector where for a long time Switzerland used
the Kurdish issue to put an embargo on Turkey and lift it as it
liked. "Turning the tap on and off at will," in the
words of one official.
Ankara finally blacklisted Switzerland in this respect and has
no more dealings with the country in the defense industry sector.
The feeling in Ankara today appears to be that this has not represented
any "loss to Turkey" and that "if anything it has
brought stability to military procurement programs given the countless
reliable alternatives available in this regard."
(TDN, 21.05.1996, page 1)
[03] Turkey speeds up preparations for Habitat II summit
By Metin Demirsar
Turkish Daily News
ISTANBUL- Preparations for the United Nations Habitat II
City Summit are near completion, and the so- called Conference
Valley, including the Lutfi Kirdar Congress Center, will be turned
over to the UN on Friday, Turkish officials said yesterday.
Some 11,000 conference delegates from 155 countries have made
reservations in 112 Istanbul hotels, coming to participate in
Habitat II, the last major world summit of this century, Yigit
Guloksuz, chairman of the Public Housing Administration (TOKI),
told the news conference. TOKI is organizing the Turkish side
of the UN meeting.
Guloksuz said the United Nations expects 20,000 to 25,000 foreigners
to partcipate in the 3- 14 June summit, with last minute registrations
expected to swell the number of participants.
The Congress Valley includes the 4,900 seat Lutfi Kirdar Congress
Center, the chief venue for the UN summit, the Cemal Resit Rey
Concert Salon, the Ataturk Cultural Center, the Habiye Cultural
Center, the Hilton Convention Center, the Taskisla Campus of Istanbul
Technical University, and the hotels in the area.
The area will be closed to traffic during the duration of the
conference for security reasons. Only participants will be able
to enter the Conference Valley during the summit meetings, officials
said.
Transportation and telelecommunications
Flanked by coordinating officials from the Foreign Ministry, the
Istanbul Muncipality and the Istanbul Province, Guloksuz said
that experts were fine tuning the Lutfi Kirdar Congress Center,
which has been converted from a sports arena.
A fleet of 250 buses and vans would be used to transport delegates
from the Ataturk International Airport to Conference Valley. An
additional 175 vehicles have been rented to meet the official
UN delegations, he noted.
Guloksuz also said thousands of meters of underground fiber optic
cables had been installed for telecommunications from the conference.
Some 140 televsion cameras, 450 computers, more than 1,000 phones
and 280 walkie talkies would be available, he added.
Simulataneous translation would be available in seven languages
during the summit.
At the news conference, the Istanbul Municipality came under severe
criticism for beginning construction of new pavements and sidewalks
in vaccinity of the confernce center only one month ahead of the
summit.
Reporters said the municipality would not be able finish the building
of the new streets and pavments by 3 June.
Pavements and sidewalks have been torn up all over the Beyoglu
district near the Conference Valley where new roads and sidewalks
are being built.
"The construction won't be finished in time," a journalist
said.
(TDN, 21.05.1996, page 3)
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