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Electoral satire, Turkey-style

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  • Electoral satire, Turkey-style

    Electoral satire, Turkey-style
    By Jonathan Gorvett, in Istanbul, Turkey

    Aljazeera.net, Qatar
    July 21 2007

    Al Jazeera continues its series of reports on Turkey ahead of
    Sunday's general elections as Jonathan Gorvett takes a look at the
    role political satire has played in the election campaign.

    For some Turks, Aliye Ozturk, is, as candidates for their country's
    presdiency go, their worst nightmare.

    She has Kurdish origins and wears a headscarf. She has Armenian roots,
    arousing deep historical suspicions, while her background as a member
    of Turkey's minority religious group, the Alevis, is likely to be
    the final straw for many of the country's more conservative Sunnis.

    She has promised a programme of sweeping reforms, has pledged not
    to appear on TV and has vowed to take issue with Angela Merkel,
    the German chancellor, over the German leader's dress sense.

    If elected, Ozturk will serve Turkish pizza at the presidential
    palace and provide visiting European ambassadors with CDs of Ottoman
    military marches.

    She is, of course, entirely fictitious.

    Boring old politics

    Ozturk is the brainchild of the Young Civilians, a group of Turkish
    youth opposed to the military~Rs role in politics.

    Yidiray Ogur, spokesman for the group, says their candidate "is kind
    of the photographic negative of Turkish state secularism".

    "We have put her poster up around Istanbul and Ankara and many people
    have called asking to interview her," he says.

    The spoof campaign has shown Turkish political satire is very much
    alive and well, as Turks head to the polls on Sunday. Indeed, it may
    be stronger than ever.

    Ferhat Tumer, the creative director of the Cocuklar advertising
    agency which produced a television advertisement endorsing Ozturk,
    says "basically, people in this country are really bored with the
    same old arguments".

    "For the last 50 years, for example, people have been arguing
    about whether someone wearing a headscarf is a threat," Tumur says.
    "Whether wearing one or not wearing one should be a reason for being
    admitted to university or not."

    "Isn't that just comic? I mean, come on - when we need better
    education, health services and a stronger economy, this is what we
    get. It's comic!"

    Tumer's agency produced the advertisement "Original Democracy", which
    recently aired on Turkish television, and it has also been successful
    on YouTube.

    The advertisement's narrator speaks rapidly, in the style of a
    salesman, exhorting listeners to "throw away unreliable systems that
    crash easily" and choose "original democracy".

    He promises the system allows listeners to "style your hair and trim
    your beard any way you want to ~V plus it is easy to use and comes
    with a full constitutional guarantee".

    But the humour is based on serious concerns.

    Military intervention

    On April 27, Turkey's politically powerful military issued a warning
    on its website over attempts by the ruling AK party to have Abdullah
    Gul, the foreign minister, elected as president.

    The military's warning sent a shockwave through the Turkish political
    system, forcing a government climbdown and the calling of early
    parliamentary elections.

    The warning also brought back memories of several earlier coup d'etats
    launched by the generals. Since a multi-party system was first
    introduced in Turkey in the 1950s, there have been coups in 1960,
    1971, 1980 and 1997.

    Ogur said: "There was a headline in the newspaper Cumhuriyet back in
    April saying that 'Young Officers' were concerned about developments.
    We took our name, 'Young Civilians' from that."

    "We held a demonstration against the 'e-coup' or internet coup,
    as it's been called, and since then the group has sort of taken off."

    Humour and protest

    Turkey had seen several large demonstrations previous to this,
    launched by supporters of the military and by secularist Turks who
    claimed the government was plotting an Islamist take-over.

    "The editor of the newspaper Radikal called us in," recalls Tumer.

    "At that time there was very high tension in society caused by these
    'republican' demonstrations. The editor wanted us to help him do
    something about this. The meetings and the tension were polarising
    people, forcing them to choose - are you on the side of secularism
    and the republic's founder, Ataturk, or are you an Islamist?

    "But people can be both democratic and secular, have religious faith
    and support Ataturk. We didn't like this situation of forcing people
    to take fake sides."

    Humour and satire have long been the tools with which Turks have
    dealt with their political situations.

    In Ottoman times, the shadow puppets Karagoz and Hacivad were often
    used to lampoon rulers.

    Later, satirical magazines flourished, the most recent of which,
    Leman, was notorious for showing Recip Tayyip Erdogan, the current
    prime minister, as a variety of different animals.

    But protest, humourous or not, prompts retaliation. Erdogan eventually
    sued the magazine last year.

    http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/3ABC 2620-D7CD-4F8A-9E8B-68F13D9EF958.htm
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