Turkish Daily News, 96-06-11
From: Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs <http://www.mfa.gov.tr>
TURKISH DAILY NEWS 11 June 1996
CONTENTS
[01] Turkey says accord with Israel threatens no one
[02] Economist survey pessimistic on Turkey's future
[03] Turkey submits national report to Habitat II
[04] Draft "Istanbul Declaration" recognizes "continuing deterioration" of urban life
[01] Turkey says accord with Israel threatens no one
Foreign Ministry spokesman plays down Arab call for Ankara
to review its military cooperation treaty with Israel
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Turkey has repeated that the accord it concluded
with Israel last February for cooperation between the two countries
in the area of military training is not against any other country.
Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Omer Akbel said on Monday
that the accord, which has caused so much controversy in the Arab
world as well as Turkey's Islamist circles, was merely a "routine
agreement." Akbel was responding to questions during a
regular press briefing on the call by the leaders of Syria, Egypt
and Saudi Arabia to review the accord.
The call, codified in a joint communique issued after the meeting
of presidents Hafez al-Assad of Syria and Hosni Mubarak of Egypt
with the Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah in Damascus on Saturday,
has been met privately with anger among Turkish officials.
These officials said, referring to the three Arab countries
concerned, that no one was in a position to question legitimate
ties Turkey establishes with any country.
They also contrasted the ties which Turkey has with Israel which
are completely in keeping with international law with the illegal
ties Syria has with an organization such as the Kurdistan Workers'
Party (PKK) which aims to divide Turkey.
Contrary to expectations, Akbel adopted a relatively moderate
tone toward the Arab declaration.
He said during his briefing for foreign media that the accord
with Israel was similar to accords Turkey had concluded with Arab
countries such as Egypt.
Akbel recalled that some Arab countries had requested information
from Ankara on the details of the accord with Israel and had later
expressed their satisfaction when information was supplied.
He said Turkey had nothing to add to the subject and skirted
further questions about the Damascus summit between Syria, Egypt
and Saudi Arabia.
Responding to another a question about Israel-Turkey joint naval
maneuvers in the Mediterranean, Akbel said that there were no
such maneuvers currently scheduled.
He also confirmed Israeli reports that Turkish Air Force pilots
had been receiving training in that country.
Israeli radio said over the weekend that Turkish jet pilots
had trained in Israeli Lavi fighters in which advanced radar and
other electronic systems were demonstrated.
It said that the avionics in the Lavi were suitable for transfer
to Turkish F-4 Phantom fighter jets.
[02] Economist survey pessimistic on Turkey's future
* Turkish army's "ambivalent role" analyzed
* Turkey is not a "bridge" between East and West
By Ugur Akinci
Turkish Daily News
WASHINGTON -- The Economist magazine, in a special June
8 survey, drew out a dark picture of Turkey, as a dynamic country
that is facing chaos unless it solves many economic, social and
political problems that it faces, and does so in a hurry.
If, for example, the Turkish army's allegedly "very brutal"
battle against the PKK continues, it will help create "the
separatist nationalism it wants to destroy," Economist said.
"If [the army] goes on, the country's religious, ethnic
and political cracks may widen beyond spanning, and the Turkish
state may simply become a brief pause in the long disintegration
of the Ottoman world."
Four economic problems
The following are identified as Turkey's top four economic problems:
"Subsidies for state enterprises, the cost of war in the
south-east, a huge black-market economy, and ineffective tax collection."
Army
The survey focused on Army's role in today's Turkey as well
since "politics in Turkey are played out on a field designed
by the army."
"The prominent role played by the army is perhaps one reason
why Turkey's democracy has never quite grown up," the Economist
said. "Politicians can always hide behind the army's back.
For example, by defining the civil war in the south-east as "terrorism,"
they have simply handed the problem to the security forces,"
the Economist said.
The army "gives no press briefings or interviews and employs
no press officials. Its role remains ambivalent: it is both
the guardian of the state and the strait-jacket which prevent
political development."
"Bridge?"
The survey zoomed in on the way Turkey has frequently been described
as the "bridge between the East and the West." That's
simply not so, Economist said.
"This is the wrong image. Individual Turks belong to either
east or west: these worlds are so different that there is no
effective bridge among them."
"Turkey is more like a tree," the survey said, "with
roots in many different cultures and ethnicities ... Each branch
knows where it is going, but the tree as whole does not."
The survey warned that "it is possible to imagine Turkey
descending into chaos" if the government "fails to reform
the economy so that living standards fall further, if it allows
the war in the east to continue, if there are riots in the streets
met by a repressive police force."
Refah
Whether the next government to tackle such problems will be
the pro-Islamic Refah depends on whether RP will be able to survive
the splits among its own ranks, Economist notes. "Refah's
dilemma now is whether to keep playing the fundamentalist card
or to moderate its message. It may have reached saturation support
among fundamentalists, but if it turns moderate it may split."
As a concrete example to Refah's problems, the survey mentioned
the case of the missing female candidate candidates in December
1995 elections. "The purists rejoiced when it decided not
to field female candidates ... but it probably lost votes as a
result."
Contradictions
Turkey is nevertheless a country with a mighty potential, it
is noted. Developing industrial centers like Bursa add great
vitality to the nation with its cheap and skilled workforce that
can compete in world markets. Bursa earns $1 billion annually
from exports, half of which comes from 6,000 small textile companies,
Economist notes.
"But while "Turkey's heads an shoulders are thrusting
into the brave new world of global markets and universal culture,
its legs are firmly stuck in history, geography, war and poverty."
And that's the greatest obstacle to realizing dreams of "golden
apple" in Turkey, Economist says -- that is, dreams of jobs,
homes, and a better life in general, and joining the European
Union in particular.
[03] Turkey submits national report to Habitat II
By Metin Demirsar
Turkish Daily News
ISTANBUL- On Monday, Turkey's National Committee presented
its national report and plan of action to the Second United Nations
Conference on Human Settlements Habitat II, the head of Turkey's
Housing Administration (TOKI) declared in Istanbul.
Flanked by conference secretary general Wally N'Dow and National
Advisory Board president Ilhan Tekeli, TOKI president Yigit Guloksuz
declared that the 155-page report aimed at "finding good
solutions" to Turkey's settlements issues.
N'Dow described the report as "one of the most thorough"
submitted to the conference. Each of the nearly 140 countries
participating in the conference will present a national report
to Habitat II that will serve as raw material for a global plan
of action.
The Turkish report, Guloksuz said, aims to make Turkish settlements
livable and sustainable and treat its citizens equitably.
"We will apply the report," Guloksuz stressed.
The recommendations of the National report reflected the expertise
of 244 organizations, three-quarters of which were non-governmental
bodies or civic societies.
Top officials of national and local governments, senior members
of the academic and scientific world, representatives of trade
unions, public institutions and professional associations and
NGOs comprise the Turkish National Committee.
Turkey's urban housing requirements, the report said, will increase
from 414,000 units a year in 1996 to 616,000 units a year by the
year 2005, when the nation's population will reach 71.7 million.
It currently has an estimated 63 million inhabitants.
The report said 28 priority issues were developed by the committee,
including a plan for a peaceful, stable city life, improvement
and renewal of gecekondu (squatter housing), and insuring a proper
environment for youth.
In its most controversial recommendation, the report said proper
shelters must be provided to the citizens who have lost their
homes as a result of the 12-year war against separatist Kurds
in Southeast Turkey.
Anywhere between 800,000 to 2 million people have been forcibly
evicted in the past two years from their homes and villages in
the southeast because of the fighting between government forces
and the rebel Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).
Many of the refugees have temporarily settled in the towns and
cities of the region. Others have migrated to the big cities of
the west, such as Istanbul.
Nearly 20,000 people have been killed in Turkey since the PKK
launched a bloody campaign for an independent Kurdish state in
the southeast in 1984.
[04] Draft "Istanbul Declaration" recognizes "continuing deterioration" of
urban life
World leaders would declare their resolve, "with a sense
of urgency," to make cities "safer, healthier, more
equitable, livable and sustainable"
Turkish delegates prepared draft for world leaders meeting later
this week to issue as expression of "political will"
to solve the urban crisis
By Don Cofman
Turkish Daily News
ISTANBUL- As presently drafted, the "Istanbul Declaration"
which world leaders are to issue Friday will recognize the "continuing
deterioration of conditions of shelter and human settlements"
and declare their resolve, "with a sense of urgency, ...
to make them safer, healthier, more equitable, livable and sustainable."
The declaration is to be a statement of the "political
will" of the presidents, prime ministers and other high government
officials from the nearly 140 countries represented here at the
second U.N. Conference on Human Settlements, Habitat II. It is
to be accompanied by a much longer document, the "Habitat
Agenda," a "global plan of action" listing exactly
how the international intention is to be carried out.
The draft declaration was prepared by Amb. Balkan Kizildeli
of the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, a member of the Turkish
delegation to the conference, and presented Monday to the "informal,
open-ended drafting group" for the declaration which he chairs.
Although the media are not permitted into the meetings of working
groups and drafting groups, the Turkish Daily News obtained a
copy of Kizildeli's draft.
Turkish Foreign Ministry Spokesman Amb. Omer Akbel last week
had said he hoped the declaration would be "strong, forceful
and memorable," as the Turkish delegation attached "special
importance" to it.
In its current form the declaration contains two pages and 14
paragraphs. This is considerably shorter than a draft Kizildeli
had offered Saturday, which reportedly ran a half dozen pages.
The draft declaration would have the national leaders -- about
30 heads of state or government are expected, along with a much
larger number of cabinet ministers -- "offer a positive vision
of sustainable human settlements, a sense of hope for the future
and an exhortation to join a truly worthwhile and engaging challenge:
that of building together a world where everyone can live in a
safe home with a promise of a decent life of comfort, good health,
happiness and hope."
They would say that their deliberations during the three-day
"high-level segment" of the conference beginning Wednesday
had been "aimed at forging new partnerships at the international
and national levels to improve our living environments."
They would "reaffirm our commitment to better standards of
living in larger freedom for all humankind" and pledge themselves
to mutual support in implementing the Habitat Agenda.
Noting the need to "arrest the deterioration of conditions
in human settlements which has reached crisis proportions,"
the leaders would "recognize the need to intensify our efforts
and cooperation to improve living conditions ... particularly
in developing countries, where the situation is particularly grave,
and in countries with economies in transition." This would
require addressing "imbalances in the global economy"
and looking for "fair and durable solutions to such issues
as finance, debt, trade and transfer of technology."
A key paragraph in the draft, given earlier controversy over
the nature of the right to housing, reads, "We agree to take
all steps necessary for the progressive realization of the right
to adequate housing. To that end, we shall seek the active participation
of our partners in civic society to ensure security of tenure
and access to affordable, adequate housing for all."
On another issue which has proven divisive, the leaders would,
according to the draft, "commit ourselves to sustainable
patterns of production, consumption, transportation and settlement
development (and) ... promote healthy living environments."
Some representatives of less-developed countries argue that they
cannot afford such environmentally sensitive, "sustainable"
development until they reach the economic levels of more developed
nations.
Perhaps to offset the disappointment those from some poorer
nations might feel at this language, the draft would pledge the
declaration's signers to "promote the transfer of technologies
and facilitate the access to information on available technologies."
To obtain "adequate funding," the declaration points
to a requirement to "mobilize financial sources at the national
and international levels and seek new and additional resources
from all sources -- multilateral and bilateral, public and private."
Controversy also is involved in the draft's call for strengthening
the "financial and institutional capacities" of local
authorities (municipalities), "while ensuring their responsiveness,
transparency and accountability." The latter two terms are
taken to be an attack on corruption, allegedly widespread in many
cities of the world, and some delegates have opposed any reference
to it.
The draft declaration would have the world leaders promise to
promote "gender equality" and to "intensify our
efforts to eradicate poverty and discrimination." They would
also promise to take steps to "improve the living conditions
in rural settlements and to reduce rural-to-urban migration."
Finally, the world leaders would pledge "strengthening
the role and functions" of the U.N. Center on Human Settlements
in Nairobi, Kenya.
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