Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Return of the Turkish `State of Exception'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Return of the Turkish `State of Exception'

    Kurdish Aspect, CO
    June 3 2006

    Return of the Turkish `State of Exception'

    Kerem Öktem

    MIDDLE EAST REPORT ONLINE

    June 3, 2006



    (Kerem Öktem is a research associate at St Antony's College,
    University of Oxford.)


    Diyarbakır, the political and cultural center of Turkey's
    predominantly Kurdish southeastern provinces, displays its beauty in
    springtime. The surrounding plains and mountains, dusty and barren
    during the summer months, shine in shades of green and the rainbow
    colors of alpine flowers and herbs. Around the walls of the old city,
    parks bustle with schoolchildren, unemployed young men and refugees
    who were uprooted from their villages during the Kurdish insurgency
    in the 1990s. The walls, neglected for decades, have been renovated
    by Diyarbakır's mayor, Osman Baydemir of the Democratic Society
    Party, successor to a series of parties representing Kurdish
    interests.

    Although Baydemir has restored that major symbol of local pride and
    Kurdish identity, the state has not yet addressed the underlying
    problems of the city, whose population is believed to have topped one
    million, and its environs. Unemployment in Diyarbakır is estimated at
    around 40 percent. The infrastructure is poor. A brief rainstorm can
    inundate even the relatively upscale shopping district of Ofis in the
    twinkling of an eye, transforming its streets into unpassable moats
    of muddy water. Refugees, squatting in buildings clinging to the
    hills or residing in the informal high-rise suburb of Bağlar, cram
    the busy streets and squares. Children of all ages and both sexes
    escape the constraints of their makeshift homes to hawk facial
    tissues, pens and erasers, or offer their services as shoeshine boys
    and porters. Even more youngsters, many in shabby school uniforms,
    others excluded from education for one reason or another, simply hang
    out, wary of the ubiquitous police with their machine guns.


    `KURDISH PROBLEM'

    Such Kurdish youth have become the Turkish mainstream media's new
    face for the `Kurdish problem,' especially after Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyıp Erdoğan declared that the `security forces will intervene
    against the pawns of terrorism, even if they are children or women.
    Everyone should realize that.' Erdoğan's comments came in the wake of
    a week of rioting in Diyarbakır and other southeastern towns in late
    March and early April 2006, in protest of the killing of 14
    combatants of the `People's Defense Forces,' a group linked to the
    rebel Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK/Kongra-Gel), whose latest
    ceasefire with the government broke down in the fall of 2005. The
    April unrest left dead at least 14 other people in the southeastern
    provinces of Diyarbakır, Batman and Mardin. In Diyarbakır, 12
    protesters, most of them young men, were shot dead by security
    forces, though three children, aged three to seven, and a man of 78
    were also killed. Conservative estimates mention 400 wounded in
    Diyarbakır alone, with more than 500 detained for interrogation. The
    violence spread to Istanbul, where three women passing by a
    demonstration in a mostly Kurdish-populated suburb were killed by
    petrol bombs cast by rioters.

    Human rights organizations in Diyarbakır speak of at least 200
    children taken into police custody and severely beaten after the
    riots. The Diyarbakır Bar Association says that 80 children between
    12 and 18 years of age remain behind bars, accused of `aiding and
    abetting' the PKK, a charge carrying a maximum jail sentence of 24
    years.

    Whether the protests were spontaneous or planned by the high command
    of the PKK/Kongra-Gel, as the Turkish government claims, is hard to
    establish. The fact that Internet and media outlets close to the
    PKK/Kongra-Gel immediately circulated the dead militants' portraits
    and personal details, together with the highly inflammatory
    allegation that Turkish security forces had used chemical weapons,
    suggests some degree of planning. In any event, the ensuing riots in
    late March and early April reminded Diyarbakır residents and the
    country's Kurdish population of the darkest days of the undeclared
    war in the southeast in the 1990s.

    Following the riots, the government hardened its rhetoric toward the
    Democratic Society Party mayors of Kurdish-populated cities, and
    dozens of local party chairmen and members in the southeast were
    taken into custody and charged with `aiding and abetting terrorists.'
    A draconian draft Law for the Fight Against Terrorism is now being
    discussed in the relevant committee of Parliament. Once again, it
    appears, Turkey's Kurdish question is framed as a national security
    issue, seemingly interrupting the government's cautious attempts,
    under pressure to meet conditions for eventual membership in the
    European Union, to resolve Kurds' political grievances. How have
    matters deteriorated so rapidly, less than two years after lawmakers,
    promising a `Kurdish spring,' paved the way for Kurdish-language TV
    and radio programs, even if limited and controlled? Is Turkey no
    longer a prime example of the moderating effects of the EU's soft
    power?


    LETHAL COCKTAIL

    Turkey's mainstream media, along with many independent analysts,
    hailed the EU's October 3, 2005 decision to start membership talks
    with Turkey as a historic turning point. The window of opportunity
    was opened by the commitment of the governing Justice and Development
    Party (in Turkish, Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi, or the AKP) to legal
    reform and political liberalization in order to strengthen the
    democratic system and protections for human rights. Backing for the
    European project ran at a high 70 percent in Turkey. The emotive
    drive for a `clean' Turkey was powerfully unifying, allowing the
    `moderate Islamists' of the AKP, secularists, Kurdish nationalists
    and, haltingly, the military establishment to join in the chorus of
    support for the prospect of EU membership. Even if this convergence
    was a single-issue alliance rather than an ideological realignment,
    the gradual withdrawal of the military from the sphere of politics
    and a more inclusive state policy towards ethnic and religious
    minorities seemed to be at hand.

    Within less than a year, however, this coincidence of positions
    regarding the country's EU orientation has eroded. This erosion is
    due to a lethal cocktail of mutually reinforcing trends, each of
    which the AKP government has failed to contain. An aggressive
    nationalist discourse, steeped in anti-imperialist and anti-European
    sentiment, as well as barely veiled xenophobia, has reemerged. The
    set of actors and practices popularly known as the `deep state'
    (derin devlet) has reared its head. Finally, turmoil in Turkey's
    Middle Eastern backyard has added yet more tension to the precarious
    domestic situation.

    RETRO-NATIONALISM

    In the last few years, taboos about national history have been lifted
    in Turkey. Topics that once could not be openly discussed, such as
    the destruction of the Ottoman Empire's Armenian communities in 1915,
    the population exchanges between Greece and Turkey, and the waves of
    discriminatory state policies toward non-Muslim minorities, are now
    in the public eye. There are myriads of new publications on the
    Armenian genocide, the persecution of Kurds and other minority
    groups, and a number of conferences and public discussions have been
    convened, leading portions of the public to rethink Turkish identity
    and the history of the Republic.

    Almost simultaneously, a reactionary brand of Turkish nationalism,
    infused with Islamist, secularist and/or socialist themes, reinvaded
    the public sphere. Such a position had been propagated by the
    maverick ex-Communist leader Doğu Perinçek and his Workers' Party for
    several years. More recently, however, this brand of nationalism has
    become acceptable in the mainstream media and in the public debate.
    Like most extreme nationalist discourses, it is based on the dual
    pathology of excessive regard for the `self' and hatred of the
    resulting multiple `others.' If, in this reading, the EU is reduced
    to a `club of Christian nations' trying to dismember the territorial
    unity of Turkey, Kurds appear as the most significant internal
    `other,' overshadowed only by what is usually referred to as the
    `Armenian diaspora.' In the new nationalist identity politics, denial
    of the destruction of Ottoman Armenians, in addition to the suspicion
    of Kurdish `separatists,' has become one of the central
    crystallization points of a reaction to the European project and the
    source of conspiratorial scenarios pertaining to the `dismemberment
    of the unitary republic.' An April survey conducted by Umut Özkirimli
    of Istanbul's Bilgi University, and published in the Tempo weekly,
    shows that a majority of the public now shares the view that the EU
    process constitutes a threat to the country's territorial integrity.
    Paradoxically, a majority -- about 63 percent -- also remains
    supportive of the distant goal of EU membership.

    The nationalist-conspiratorial mindset is reproduced in a growing
    body of semi-factual bestsellers and films that celebrate the history
    of the Turkish people as a fight for survival against malignant
    European powers and the neo-colonial United States. Sales of such
    books easily reach 100,000 copies or more, with Turgut Özakman's
    These Mad Turks, depicting the 1919-1923 Turkish war of independence
    as a heroic, almost supernatural struggle of good against evil,
    selling more than 700,000 official, and probably as many pirated,
    copies. If this retrospective response to current developments
    attempts to repair a `humiliated national pride' with reference to
    the `golden age' of the War of Independence, the box office hit
    Valley of the Wolves in Iraq deals with a much more immediate theme.
    The film, loosely based on a real story, follows a Turkish avenger on
    his mission to restore national pride after the humiliation of
    Turkish soldiers by US occupying forces. The protagonist operates
    outside the law, backed not by state agencies, but by patronage
    extending from mafia-like organizations, extreme nationalists and
    `patriotic' individuals within the state apparatus. The stress on
    `madness' in many of these publications is disconcerting, if not
    surprising -- as is their celebration of violence and illegality as
    long as it defends the honor of `Turkishness.'

    These pop culture manifestations of national pride and suspicion of
    the outside world might be read as indicators of a public disoriented
    by the `free market of ideas,' and frustrated by rejectionist and
    essentialist discourses on Turkey in Europe. The remedy proposed by
    these books, TV series and movies is the safe haven of familiar
    nationalist narratives of a past splendor waiting to be restored. As
    such, their extreme success might be explained, to some extent, by
    the workings of market forces.

    Some commentators, however, argue that there is a concerted effort of
    `psychological warfare' behind this `retro-nationalist' cultural
    production. There once was a National Security Council organ actually
    named the Center for Psychological Warfare, responsible for spreading
    information and disinformation during the Kurdish insurgency. The
    center was officially disbanded, yet its structure and political
    objectives have been taken over by at least one office within the
    Interior Ministry, the Department for Public Relations. An
    undisclosed number of agencies within the military and security
    establishment, along with ultra-nationalist networks, are believed
    still to be operating in this field. According to an April 4 report
    in the Islamist newspaper Zaman, the Interior Ministry is concerned
    to instill in Kurdish schoolchildren a sense of ethnic and religious
    unity with the Turkish nation through the celebration of `collective
    victories' in World War I and the war of independence, hence
    discouraging identification with a `Kurdish cause.'

    Many members of the AKP government might be sympathetic to some of
    this chauvinist rhetoric, especially after their hopes of lifting the
    headscarf ban in Turkish universities were crushed by the European
    Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. Yet the party's current
    inability to set the tone of the debate, and its complete passivity
    regarding the outbreak of violence in the Kurdish provinces, evokes a
    more serious transformation: a reshuffling of the actors in the
    political sphere and their capabilities. There appears to be a
    creeping transfer of power from the democratically elected government
    back to the military and security establishments and their formal,
    semi-formal and extralegal extremities -- in short, the `deep state.'

    RETURN OF THE DEEP STATE?

    Signs of renewed PKK operations and clandestine counter-terrorist
    activities in the southeast have multiplied since November 2005, when
    a bomb exploded in a bookstore in Şemdinli, a town in the province of
    Hakkari, close to the Iraqi border. Locals witnessing the attack
    identified the culprits as three plainclothes gendarmerie
    intelligence officers. The incident evoked the series of
    counter-insurgency plots from the 1990s, when the state sought to
    contain PKK terror with extrajudicial killings carried out by
    semi-legal anti-terrorism units, the Kurdish Hizballah and
    paramilitary `village guards' on the state payroll. Although the AKP
    government promised a transparent investigation of the Şemdinli
    bombing, regional discontent soon descended into violence, most
    probably steered by the PKK/Kongra-Gel command. The riots resulted in
    several protesters being shot dead by security forces.

    In a bold move, the chief prosecutor of the province of Van, Ferhat
    Sarıkaya, drafted an indictment that alluded to relations between the
    General Command of the Armed Forces and PKK informants, and to the
    involvement of gendarmerie officers in the Şemdinli incident. The
    indictment reached the press before court proceedings started,
    suggesting a political motive of exposing the army's dealings. In
    spite of the seriousness of the allegations, the prosecutor was
    neutralized after the chief of the general staff, Gen. Hilmi Özkök,
    reportedly contacted Prime Minister Erdoğan and asked for `necessary
    steps to be taken,' as members of the military were accused. In due
    course, the Higher Council for Judges and Prosecutors dismissed
    Sarıkaya from his post and barred him from the legal profession, on
    the grounds that the indictment might lead to accusations against the
    army and other state offices. This move was met with widespread
    dismay from the country's bar associations and even some senior
    judges, who declared it a disproportionate intervention at best, and
    a most serious breach of the judiciary's independence at worst. Among
    many Kurds, Sarıkaya's dismissal was understood as a lack of
    commitment to accountability for those in the state apparatus who act
    in a clearly provocative fashion to fuel tensions between Kurds and
    the state.

    Tensions in southeastern towns and migrant quarters of western cities
    were left to simmer, even if Erdoğan attempted to diffuse anger by
    acknowledging the `Kurdish problem' and insisting on a
    `constitutional citizenship' uniting all inhabitants of the country,
    regardless of ethnic and religious background. With the rising
    numbers of PKK fighters and soldiers being killed in combat, however,
    a renewed eruption in the southeast seemed unavoidable, and in April,
    it occurred.

    As a number of commentators put it, this descent into violence
    resembles comparable instances of social unrest in the late 1970s
    before the coup of September 12, 1980, and the decade of the Kurdish
    insurgency that reached its peak in the 1990s and triggered passage
    of the infamous Anti-Terrorism Law of 1991. The immediate response of
    the government to the April riots, in the form of the draft Law for
    the Fight Against Terrorism, evokes the limitations on human rights
    and personal freedoms facilitated by the 1991 law and administered
    brutally during the state of emergency in the southeast.

    In its current version, the new draft law threatens to make obsolete
    most liberalizing reforms of the penal code undertaken in the last
    few years. The draft outlaws not only the `propagation of terrorist
    groups,' but also the `propagation of the goals of terrorist groups,'
    an ambiguous formulation that could be applied to penalize legitimate
    requests such as education in Kurdish, on the grounds that these
    demands are also advocated by the PKK. The new draft brings back
    prison sentences of one to three years for the publication of views
    that are deemed supportive of terrorist groups. In addition, the
    chief prosecutor of any province would be able to suspend
    publications, an action hitherto only possible with a court order.
    Many critics of this draft point to the extensive scope of the
    definition of terror, which could be used to charge independent
    journalists and Kurds engaging in legal politics. Furthermore,
    membership in organizations that advocate changing the constitutional
    order would be punished with heavy jail sentences, even if violence
    or incitement to violence is not on the group's agenda.

    THE MIDDLE EASTERN FRONT

    Developments on Turkey's Middle Eastern front are further stirring
    the pot of recrudescent nationalism and assertiveness by the `deep
    state.' Northern Iraq, or Iraqi Kurdistan, closer than ever to formal
    independence, is a base for PKK units that continue to infiltrate
    Turkey across uncontrollable mountainous borders. Some analysts argue
    that most of the recent incidents would not have been possible
    without the logistical infrastructure supplied by the leaders of the
    Kurdistan Regional Government in Iraq. The unwillingness of US
    occupying forces to contain the movements of PKK units into Turkish
    territory is easy to comprehend, as the Kurdish entity in northern
    Iraq and its leaders remain Washington's only reliable allies in
    Iraq. Turkish decision makers, however, are increasingly upset.

    Along with PKK infiltration from Iraq, mounting tensions over Iran's
    nuclear program and rumors of airstrikes have induced the Turkish
    military to deploy large army contingents to the Iraqi and Iranian
    borders and to the urban centers of the southeast. While army sources
    consistently deny allegations that the deployment is linked to
    imminent extra-territorial movements of army units, recent incursions
    into northern Iraq with the aim of targeting PKK positions suggest
    otherwise. (Websites close to the PKK/Kongra-Gel have documented a
    few of these raids.) Nevertheless, the relocation of army units to
    the Kurdish provinces almost certainly has the additional corollary
    of reestablishing a semi-state of emergency in those provinces, which
    had just begun to be demilitarized a few years ago.

    THE AKP'S LOW PROFILE

    In State of Exception, Giorgio Agamben refers to President George W.
    Bush after September 11, 2001 as attempting to produce a `situation
    in which the emergency becomes the rule, and the very distinction
    between peace and war (and between foreign and civil war) becomes
    impossible.' Reviewing the brief history of Turkish democracy since
    the 1950s, one could safely argue that the notion of `emergency as a
    rule' has been a structural determinant of Turkish politics, and even
    more so, the governance of the mostly Kurdish southeast. The hope
    that the AKP government would use the EU-induced reform process to
    extirpate the extralegal networks tying the security establishment to
    the international mafia and extreme nationalists appears to have been
    unfounded. Recent developments suggest that these networks have
    remained in place, and can now benefit from the interplay of rising
    Turkish nationalism, mounting inter-ethnic violence and a comeback of
    the armed forces to the sphere of politics. All of these phenomena
    reignite the Sèvres syndrome, the sense of a beleaguered Turkish
    nation on the verge of extinction, which in turn justifies the
    politics of exception, namely the suspension of human rights and
    individual liberties in the fight against `Kurdish terrorism.'

    Under these conditions, the EU's soft power will encounter further
    roadblocks in Turkey. Should Turkish units make regular sorties into
    Iraq, and persist in enforcing heavy-handed security measures to
    quell Kurdish protest in the southeast, Turkish-EU relations are
    likely to sour. With no PKK ceasefire on the horizon and the ongoing
    ostracism of elected Kurdish leaders on the one side, and growing
    inter-ethnic alienation and the threat of a new Kurdish insurgency on
    the other, the prospects for continuation of the government's reform
    course seem bleak. This predicament of the AKP is aggravated by the
    fact that almost all opposition parties, including the centrist
    Republican People's Party of Deniz Baykal, have chosen to attack the
    government from the right, reverting to the emotive language of an
    even more hawkish nationalist position. Baykal caused an uproar in
    Parliament when he alleged that the government intends to pardon the
    jailed leader of the PKK/Kongra-Gel, Abdullah Öcalan.

    Trapped in the power play of multi-party politics, the AKP appears to
    have chosen to keep a low profile until the presidential elections
    and possible early elections for Parliament in 2007. Party
    strategists may believe that mounting tensions over the erosion of
    the principle of secularism will ultimately strengthen the party's
    appeal to its pious core constituents, and help its reelection.

    Yet that strategy entails obvious risks, as seen in the aftermath of
    the May 18 shooting of a senior judge by an Islamist youth angered by
    the court's ruling banning the headscarf for public-sector employees
    and university students. Demonstrators blamed the AKP (which bitterly
    criticized the court's ruling) for the shooting, some going so far as
    to call Erdoğan `a murderer.' If the AKP merely leaves the field to
    their political opponents, such tensions could intensify, and there
    could also be a vacuum in policy toward northern Iraq and probably
    Cyprus, as well as in the southeastern provinces. The security
    establishment would soon fill such a vacuum, prone as it is to
    extralegal action in domestic matters and brusqueness in
    international politics. Should this occur, EU accession talks would
    be in jeopardy, as would social and economic stability.

    An alternative scenario would be possible if the governing AKP
    regained the political initiative by reestablishing an EU-oriented
    reformist consensus. Regaining the initiative would mean addressing
    Kurdish grievances, softening the requirement that parties win 10
    percent of the national vote to be seated in Parliament, a rule that
    effectively excludes Kurdish parties, engaging the Cyprus question in
    good faith, and resuscitating the process of legal reform. Another
    important step would be to withdraw or substantially revise the
    anti-terrorism bill, which in its current iteration is likely to be
    overruled by the Constitutional Court. This scenario would, however,
    also require the EU to reach out to Turkey on issues such as Cyprus,
    which currently appears rather farfetched.

    GRIM PROGNOSTICATIONS

    Angry young men and children in the streets of Diyarbakır say they do
    not desire to return to the undeclared war of the 1990s, which left
    more than 35,000 dead, thousands of villages burned and destroyed,
    and more than a million people displaced from their villages into the
    packed cities of the southeast as well as metropolises in the west.
    They also affirm, however, that if `nothing changes,' a `civil war
    will break out' for which they believe themselves to be
    `well-prepared.' In the absence of job opportunities, decent living
    conditions, parliamentary representation for parties sensitive to
    Kurdish concerns and government recognition of Kurdish grievances,
    these grim prognostications deserve to be taken seriously.

    What can be said with some degree of certainty is that the great
    expectations vested in the AKP government and in the dream of a
    shortcut to EU membership were illusory indeed. The government would
    take a considerable political risk if it committed itself sincerely
    to clearing the swamp of extralegal ultra-nationalist and mafia
    organizations, nurtured during the decade of violent conflict in the
    1990s, and their mentors in the state apparatus. Without such
    resolve, a further escalation of violence in the southeast and an
    increase in hostility between Turkish and Kurdish communities is
    inescapable. What may happen even in the worst-case scenario is a
    more realistic evaluation of Turkey's capacity for and interest in
    joining the EU. In the words of Philip Robins, Turkey is a
    `double-gravity state,' condemned by geography and history to exist
    between and within the state systems of the Middle East and Europe.
    In any case, before spring turns into summer in Diyarbakır and the
    rest of Turkey, there will be many cold days.

    http://www.kurdishaspect.com/doc63104.html
Working...
X