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Pop star could be prosecuted after questioning Turks' militarism

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Published Date: 28 February 2008
WITH the death toll in Turkey's operations against Kurdish nationalists in Iraq rising daily, one of the country's most famous pop stars was in serious trouble this week after she questioned deeply-engrained Turkish militarism on prime-time television.
"I am not a mother, nor ever will be, but I would not bury my child for somebody else's war," said Bulent Ersoy, during a broadcast of Star TV's hugely popular Popstar Alaturka.

Visibly shocked, another presenter intervened to try to shut her up.


"May God give me a son so that I can send him off to our glorious army," Ebru Gundes said, adding a nationalistic phrase repeated without fail at every military funeral: "Martyrs never die, the fatherland cannot be divided."

But Ersoy, a transsexual who was banned from television by a military junta in the 1980s, was not put off. "Always the same clichéd phrases," she riposted. "Children go, bitter tears, funerals … And afterwards, these clichéd phrases."

An Istanbul prosecutor promptly opened an investigation into her for alienating the people from military service, a crime punishable by up to three years in jail. The broadcasting watchdog announced that it was considering banning Ersoy from the screen.

These were predictable reactions in this profoundly nationalist country where criticising the conscript-heavy army is a risky business.

From an early age, Turkish schoolchildren are taught that "all Turks are born soldiers". School textbooks warn children that a man who has not done his military service "cannot be useful to himself, his family, or his homeland". Not recognised by the law, Turkish conscientious objectors face a potentially infinite round of trial and imprisonment.

Yet, while Ersoy's comments earned her Turkish media opprobrium, the packed audience in Star TV's studio applauded her warmly.

It is just the latest sign that, after 24 years of war against the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and 40,000 deaths, people are beginning to question the state's traditional tendency to see the Kurdish issue merely as a matter of security.

Turkey declined yesterday to give Baghdad a timetable for the withdrawal of troops fighting Kurdish guerrillas in northern Iraq, resisting pressure from the United States and other allies to end the latest offensive quickly.





The full article contains 378 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 27 February 2008 10:34 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Guga II,

Rockall 28/02/2008 01:57:45
And they still think they are a fit and proper country to be allowed into the EU. Pigs might fly.
2

,

28/02/2008 02:46:38
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

Findlay Thompson,

28/02/2008 12:15:49
2

Very good point and accurate up to "only the US enshrines free speech"!
4

SOS,

USA 22/03/2008 22:39:50
Guga, maybe you should read the article's fine print to recognize that this story has no relevance to Turkey's EU bid.

A Turkish prosecutor has opened a case against Ersoy. Technically, any lawyer can open a case against anybody, whether the case actually goes to court is an entirely separate matter. Even though the case has been opened, it remains to be seen whether Ersoy will actually be prosecuted - given the frivolous nature of the accusations against her it is fairly unlikely the case against her will actually stand - in all likelihood it will probably be thrown out.

 

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