Thursday, 4 August 2016

Turkey: Sultan Erdogan undoing Kemalist revolution and losing Western support





Turkey’s internal love-hate swing between the mosque and the military barracks holds no surprise. Externally,  however, the emergence of  a stronger  President Recep Tayyip Erdogan after the failed military coup of July 15 giving him a dictatorial image has further pushed back the country’s hopes of  joining the European Union or even remaining a dependable member of  Nato.
Internally,  the coup has thrown the country into unprecedented turmoil because of the sheer numbers of people, detaied,  jailed or fired from their jobs. Nearly 60,000 jobs have been put  on the line, each affecting a family of at least five or a total of 300,000 (three lakh) lives directly. And going by a rough yardstick, each family probably has at least five other families as close friends. In other words a million and a half people could be  living in fear of  Erdogan’s  victorious regime.
 Unlilke in earlier coup des etats since the revolution ushered by Kemal Ata Turk almost a century ago,  when the military had emerged as the successful defender of a secular polity, the  July 15 coup has thrown up the mosque allies as  victors led by Erdogan, whatever his claims to democracy. His followers are euphoric that their man has come on top with the resounding chant of  Allahu  Akbar blaring from the mosque loud speaker and the captive civic theatre. Whether Allah is on anybody’s side, nobody can tell for sure.
Erdogan means business and has already imposed a three-month state of emergency, enabling him and his Justice and Development party (AKP) cabinet to bypass parliament, rule by decree, and suspend rights and freedoms. The first decree, already in operation, extends detention without charge from four to 30 days and orders the closure of more than 2,000 private schools, associations, foundations, unions, health institutions and universities.
The assault on educational institutions , particularly targeting the deans of all universities, is in line with Erdogan’s earlier camouflaged agenda of  bringing  back pre-Kemalist educational ethos. The strident movement for the revival of  Arabic script to slowly replace the Kemalist Latin script  for  official Turkish language, which has been raging  for quite some time, is a pointer to the shape of  things to come, according to secular forces in the country.  A throwback in the name of culture and religion cannot be underestimated, the secularists fear.
Lists of all sorts of ‘dissenters’ -- or ‘anti-nationals’ in current Indian jargon -- 
have gone out sighting  nearly 60,000 thousand people, including 15,000 educationists, 3,000 judges and prosecutors, besides an unknown number of  soldiers and civilians, according to Can Dundar, Editor of Turkey’s leading news daily the Cumhuriyet. “ A campaign has been launched to revive the death penalty, which was abolished in 2002. It is the biggest witch hunt in the history of the republic,” he says.
In the latest count 47 newspapers have been shut down and arrest warrants issued for 47 journalists from the opposition Zaman newspaper which was shut down  back in March. As many as 117 general rank military officers, including 30 from air force and 32 admirals from navy. have been detained. The list of civilian staff from various government departments sectors under fire is still lengthening.
Erdogan blames the current upheaval on plotter linked to the US based cleric Fethullah Gülen, his long-time ally now turned foe, as the mastermind of an  attempted military takeover. He has already branded Gulen’s supporters as Fethullah Terror Organisation (Feto).
He has demanded Gulen’s extradition – a demand unlikely to be met by the US in the absence of any concrete evidence. However, the Erdogan regime has caught hold of the cleric’s nephew, Muhammed Sait Gülen, who was picked up from the  Turkish city of Erzurum.
Pakistan is perhaps one of the few countries which has accepted the Erdogan line in toto but Turkey’s powerful Western allies and financial backers seem to be unconvinced by Erdogan’s evidence against Gulen. Many of them wonder   who is the bigger cleric --  Fethullah Gülen or Recep Tayyip Erdogan who is being dubbed as Sultan Erdogan and Mullah Erdogan by his detractors.
His tirade against Gulen may convince his followers in Turkey but to the outside  world Gulen is  just a symbol of  opposition, even a troublesome opposition but democratic nonetheless. Any advice to show some moderation in his excessive purge of opposition, from American or European friends, seems to make him even more paranoiac. He has accused the head of US Central Command of "siding with coup plotters."
He didn't  name  General Joseph Votel , but it was clear he was railing against the American general who expressed his unease about  many of US contacts or interlocutors have been purged or arrested. Both sides have hardened their stand, deepening a rift between Nato’s two largest military powers.
Relations with Europe are not getting better either. Even Germany, which needs Turkish help most and has entered a $3billion deal to stem the flood of Syrian and other refugees entering Europe via Turkey, refused Erdogan’s request to address  a Turkish immigrants’ rally in Cologne via video-link – a clear signal that Berlin is not siding with any Turkish side.
There has been no approval of  Erdogan’s  crackdown in the European press which has been  pretty critical of his increasingly autocratic rule. There is open criticism of his efforts to garner more  power for himself  by changing the constitution from a parliamentary democracy to a presidential system investing himself with wide executive powers.  Equally suspect in European eyes is the  president’s tilt towards  Islamic ritual and the mosque.
Notwithstanding open or simmering rifts with America and Europe and hugely wide internal divisions, Sultan Erdogan is here to stay for now, with more power to his elbow.

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