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The enduring popularity of Recep Tayyip Erdogan

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  • The enduring popularity of Recep Tayyip Erdogan

    Turkey

    The enduring popularity of Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    Mar 5th 2009 | ANKARA AND VAN
    >From The Economist print edition


    But will popularity blunt the reforming zeal of Turkeys prime minister?

    Illustration by Peter Schrank


    AT A recent rally in the predominantly Kurdish city of Van, in
    south-east Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan was in his element. Turkeys
    prime minister rattled off his governments achievements, bellowing out
    to a jubilant crowd, 22 primary schools, five health clinics, 82
    kilometres of paved roads.

    With only three weeks to go before countrywide municipal elections on
    March 29th, Mr Erdogan has hit the campaign trail in a confident
    mood. Most opinion polls suggest that his mildly Islamist Justice and
    Development Party (AKP) will clobber its opponents yet again. The
    secular opposition Republican Peoples Party (CHP) is so desperate that
    it no longer talks much of the risk of sharia law or the dangers of
    Kurdish separatism. Instead it has resorted to recruiting female
    candidates who wear the Islamic headscarf and calling for the Kurdish
    new year to be declared a national holiday.

    None of this is likely to make much impression on voters, most of whom
    will stick with the AKP. Nor will it affect Mr Erdogans policies. Ever
    since he was handsomely re-elected in the 2007 general election, his
    critics say that the prime minister has become increasingly
    autocratic, drifting away from the reformist agenda that first brought
    the AKP to single-party rule in 2002. It does not help that the
    European Union is continuing to prevaricate in the long-drawn-out
    talks about Turkeys membership application, sapping enthusiasm for
    reform in Ankara.

    As further evidence of autocratic tendencies, the critics point to Mr
    Erdogans continuing quarrel with Aydin Dogan, the countrys biggest
    media mogul, whose outlets have exposed corruption scandals in which
    individuals close to the government have been implicated. Mr Dogan
    believes this explains why he faces a $500m claim for allegedly unpaid
    taxes, a charge he passionately denies. Turkey has become a republic
    of fear, complains Sedat Ergin, managing editor of Milliyet, a leading
    Dogan newspaper.

    On the international front Mr Erdogan is raising eyebrows for more
    than his (understandable) loss of enthusiasm for the EU. He has also
    attracted unfavourable attention for his virulent attacks on Israel,
    especially during its war in Gaza, and for his budding friendships
    with Iran and Sudan.

    Among ordinary Turks, however, Mr Erdogan remains the most popular and
    charismatic leader since a visionary former prime minister and
    president, Turgut Ozal. One old Kurdish woman in Van sums up the mood:
    Tayyip is one of us, he treats us as equals. Mr Erdogans popularity
    has even forced his enemies, notably the countrys hawkish generals,
    who have often tried to topple his government, to back off.

    Mr Erdogans touch was in evidence in Van as he and his vivacious wife,
    Emine, handed out toys to ragged children. Elsewhere in Turkey, the
    government has been giving away coal, school textbooks and, as the
    elections draw near, even fridges and washing-machines to the
    poor. Such profligacy has angered the IMF. A long-delayed standby
    facility with the fund has yet to be signed because of differences
    over public spending. But a defiant Mr Erdogan insists, in an
    interview, that Turkeys economy is robust enough to get through its
    current troubles without IMF help.

    Like most countries, Turkey has been hit by the world financial
    crisis. The Turkish lira is slipping against the dollar, GDP is
    expected to shrink this year and unemployment is rising. Yet, partly
    thanks to tough regulation, not a single Turkish bank has gone
    under. The economy is wobbling but remains on its feet.

    No wonder Mr Erdogan is so confident. Many worry that another big
    electoral win may swell his head further. Yet for all his
    pre-electoral posturing, there are signs that his pragmatic self may
    come back. He seems to have grasped that he has an image problem. He
    has hired a new, affable spokesman and is courting foreign journalists
    for the first time. In an interview with this correspondent, he freely
    bestowed smiles (and dried fruit) as he insisted he was no autocrat. I
    can be impatient at times, was all he would admit.

    The launch of Turkeys first official Kurdish-language television
    channel in January and the governments calls for the establishment of
    Kurdish literature departments at state universities have raised hopes
    of more reforms. After years of mutual hostility, Turkey and the Iraqi
    Kurds are at last talking. A deal with separatist guerrillas from the
    Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), who have been fighting the Turkish army
    since 1984 from bases in northern Iraq, is said to be on the
    table. Turkeys generals are tentatively compliant.

    All of this will make Mr Erdogans meeting this weekend with Hillary
    Clinton, Americas secretary of state, especially significant. Mr
    Erdogan will brief her on talks with another former Turkish foe,
    Armenia. Once the local elections in Turkey and the April 24th
    anniversary of the mass killings of Ottoman Armenians in 1915 are
    past, it is expected that formal ties will be re-established between
    the two countries and their long-closed border will be reopened. This
    may also stave off attempts by Americas Congress to pass a resolution
    calling the massacres a genocide.

    An IMF deal is widely expected after the local elections as well,
    though Mehmet Simsek, the economy minister, insists that the IMF must
    drop some of its more orthodox demands. On progress towards joining
    the EU, the next big test for Mr Erdogan will be whether he can budge
    a bit more on the opening of Turkish ports and airports to Cyprus,
    shaming Turkeys detractors within the EU (notably the French) into
    stopping their efforts to undermine the membership talks.

    The appointment of Egemen Bagis, a sharp young English-speaker, as
    Turkeys first cabinet-rank EU negotiator suggests that Mr Erdogan may
    make a fresh effort to put the EU talks back on track. But if he is
    genuinely serious, he will have to take a second shot at rewriting
    Turkeys constitution, crafted by the generals after a military coup in
    1980. His previous attempt at this almost led the Constitutional Court
    to ban the AKP on the ground that it was trying to impose sharia
    law. That is because he started off in piecemeal fashion by trying to
    ease bans on the Islamic headscarf in government offices and
    universities. Mr Erdogan would do better this time if he worked with
    the opposition to produce a constitution that met the wishes of all
    Turks, not just pious ones.

    http://www.economist.com/world/europe/Print erFriendly.cfm?story_id=13240303
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