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ANKARA: De Facto State Of Turkey: Shall We Despair?

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  • ANKARA: De Facto State Of Turkey: Shall We Despair?

    DE FACTO STATE OF TURKEY: SHALL WE DESPAIR?

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 22 2014

    by YAVUZ BAYDAR
    May 22, 2014, Thursday

    Recently, I found myself in a conversation with some lawyer friends
    -- whose lives have been spent focusing on human rights causes --
    about the course of Turkey and the despair surrounding the people
    and on what to expect during and after the presidential elections.

    No matter what aspect we discuss, the Turkey they described as
    of today is a country on auto-pilot. The ruler, they agreed, has
    normalized defiance of the law and now encourages everyone around
    him, and others, to do so. The country has, as a whole, entered a
    "de facto state," meaning most of the issues are bound to be handled
    with less or no consideration for the law.

    So is, for example, the Kurdish peace process, they argued.

    As the pro-Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) political segment seems to
    be engaged in talks with Abdullah Ocalan, the de facto developments -
    on the municipal level -- only expand the ground for self-rule and
    a political monopoly.

    When I mentioned the necessity to institutionalize reforms in a new
    constitution, they only smiled and said that things are running on such
    a course that they have their own dynamics. That is to say, whether
    or not there is a new constitution, Turkey will soon find itself in a
    new sociopolitical reality, which may lead to cooperation between the
    Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the Peace and Democracy Party
    (BDP) on a new social contract, excluding the main opposition.

    But they fully agreed with me that such a prospect would signal a
    period of unrest on a national scale. Trying to rule Turkey with no
    sense of consensus, with disrespect for the rule of law and with a
    growing appetite for oppressive methods will be a costly experiment.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's "national will" motto and its
    total superiority over anything else is an erroneous invitation for
    Turkey to become ungovernable at the end of the day.

    Kurds are happy, the Kurdish lawyer said. They have no other
    alternative besides tying their hopes to Erdogan, and they feel there
    is historic momentum to leave behind dark times. What about all those,
    among the Turks who fought for the Kurds' cause, demanding a future
    of freedom and rights? Is it not a display of ethno-selfishness that
    Kurds leave all those people alone, vulnerable and targeted?

    "Go and tell that to the CHP [Republican's People Party] and other
    groups on the left. The Kurds have been left alone and ignored by
    them. And, mind you, if they saw any alternative to a democratic
    front, they would welcome it," was the Kurdish lawyer's response. He,
    of course, has a solid point.

    The issue is that without the Kurdish vote, no presidential candidate
    can seriously challenge Erdogan. Therefore, for swaths of people
    across the ideological divide, post-August Turkey already looks like
    a nightmare. They see a "party state" taking root indefinitely.

    Any silver lining? Daron Acemoglu -- a Turkish-Armenian who is
    one of the most renowned and cited economists in the world and who
    is currently with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
    --wrote in a Foreign Affairs article titled "The Failed Autocrat"
    that "Despite creeping authoritarianism and polarization in Turkish
    politics, one shouldn't despair."

    "Although Erdogan's support among the urban and rural poor and large
    segments of the middle class seems solid today, it is predicated on
    continued economic growth and the delivery of public services to the
    underprivileged," he argues.

    "Erdogan's joy ride is over if the economy heads south (and it could --
    Turkey's growth over the past six years has depended on unsustainable
    levels of domestic consumption and trade deficits). In that case, the
    opposition is likely to broaden and, having learned from experience
    with the AKP, will eventually begin to demand institutions that fairly
    represent the country as a whole.

    "This is not to suggest that the recent slide in Turkish governance
    should be viewed through rose-colored glasses. The AKP continues to
    repress any opposition and will surely try to gag the Constitutional
    Court. But the party's efforts to monopolize power should not surprise
    in historical context. More than 50 years on, the process of building
    inclusive political institutions in many postcolonial societies is
    still ongoing. And it took France more than 80 years to build the
    Third Republic after the collapse of the monarchy in 1789."

    I wish I were this optimistic.




    From: A. Papazian
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