Demokratie in der Türkei: Hat das Land europäische Standards erreicht?

DISCLAIMER: Die hier aufgeführten Ansichten sind Ausdruck der Meinung des Verfassers, nicht die von Euractiv Media network.

Der Umsetzungsprozess der politischen Kriterien von
Kopenhagen darf nicht aufhören. Diese Auffassung
vertreten Senem Aydin und E.
Fuat Keyman
in einem Artikel, der vom Centre
for European Policy Studies 
veröffentlicht wurde.
Falls und wenn die Türkei die Beitrittsverhandlungen mit der EU
aufnimmt, sollten die Union und die Türkei ihre Bemühungen für eine
demokratischere Türkei fortsetzen. Dies sollte vor allem durch
glaubwürdige Bedingungen von Seiten der EU und eine effizientere
Umsetzung der politischen Kopenhagener Kriterien seitens der Türkei
geschehen.

This combination has in recent years led to substantial
improvements in Turkish democracy. The reforms that have so far
been undertaken have addressed long-criticised aspects of Turkish
democracy, particularly the role of the military in politics,
respect for human rights, protection of minorities and the judicial
system. 

Significant achievements have been made in legislative and
institutional terms, but there is still much to be done regarding
implementation. Given the pace of reforms in the last three years,
the remaining legislative and institutional tasks could be achieved
in a relatively short period of time by the Turkish authorities.
What requires more energy and more time are efforts geared towards
changing the mindsets of the public officials, in particular the
police force, bureaucracy, military, public prosecutors, the judges
and the citizenry of the country. Further training and education
coupled with the continued and credible application of EU
conditionality would secure the path of reform which in the eyes of
many is as revolutionary as those achieved by Mustafa Kemal and his
followers in the 1920s and 1930s. 

Turkey’s identity and its compatibility with Europeans norms of
democracy and economic modernisation should be judged on the basis
of an objective, historical and analytical reading of modern
Turkey. Even though Turkey today faces the problem of democratic
consolidation and societal modernisation, on the basis of its
political identity as a secular parliamentary democracy, it is
compatible with European norms of democracy and liberal economy.
That is why the more Turkey has attempted to meet the Copenhagen
criteria and its implementation, the more it has consolidated its
democracy and made its modernity liberal, plural and
multi-cultural. Moreover, Turkey has achieved this in a short
period not only because of the strong political will to do so, but
also because it has already established the institutions and norms
of democracy and modernity.

 

To read the full text of the article, visit the CEPS website.

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