Patrice Riemens on Sun, 16 Jun 2013 10:34:03 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Peter Beaumont: Recep Tayyip Erdogan struggles to make sense of Turkey's trauma (Observer/Guardian) |
original to: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jun/15/erdogan-misses-point-turkish-unite-defend-rights Recep Tayyip Erdogan struggles to make sense of Turkey's trauma After a fortnight of missteps, the prime minister grasps that the protests are harming his regime. But he has not recognised they are unlikely to end if he removes the freedom his people expect Peter Beaumont, foreign affairs editor The Observer, Saturday 15 June 2013 Sitting by her tent in Istanbul's Gezi Park, child psychiatrist Tugba Camcioglu, 36, ponders what brought her here. She is not, she admits, very political. The handmade poster on her tent is about child abuse, not the fate of the park or even the vexed subject of Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan. "I came because the park should be kept for children. I came to stand up for the weak," she says. I meet Camcioglu the day after last week's assault on nearby Taksim Square with teargas, water cannon and rubber bullets that cleared it of protesters. It's her first evening in the park, which days later would again be stormed by riot police. "Turkey is like a traumatised adolescent," she explains. "We have had so many traumas, such as what happened with the Kurds, that we are finding it difficult to mature as a country. I'm not angry. And I'm not afraid. When I told my nine-year-old that I was planning to come here, he said: 'Don't go. Erdogan won't understand'." Camcioglu is one of those whom Erdogan has branded as capulcu ? literally, "riffraff" ? a word that has been appropriated by the protesters as a badge of pride. It is posted on tents, homes, banners, even on biscuits. After a fortnight of missteps by Erdogan and his moderate Islamist AKP, during which five have died and 5,000 have been injured in protests in dozens of cities, the prime minister's most recent moves suggest that, while he may not comprehend the reasons for the protests, at last he understands the damage they are doing to him. Recent days have seen a series of dizzying flip-flops. On Thursday night, Erdogan appeared abruptly to change tactics. Meeting in Ankara for the first time with representatives of the protesters, he offered if not an olive branch then the hint of one, backing down on his insistence that Gezi Park must be redeveloped to rebuild an Ottoman-era barracks. By Saturday evening, with protesters still refusing to leave, Erdogan was once again in full fire and brimstone mode as he addressed tens of thousands of supporters in a suburb of the capital, Ankara, railing about plots and criminals, and telling those in the park to leave or face again Turkey's security forces. Riot police were deployed hours later. If there is a problem for Erdogan, it is that the protests that began on 31 May with a police assault on an environmental camp to save the park's green space have long since moved on from being about Gezi's lovely old trees. A poll of 498 protesters in the park, published last week, found that 58% were there to protest against Erdogan and a style of government that his critics say is increasingly high-handed; just 3% were there for the trees. Erdogan's gamble in agreeing to talk to the protesters ? like all his moves in this crisis, including ordering the riot police to clear Taksim Square last week and again last night ? has been high risk. Coming just a few hours before police released 43 arrested protesters, in accordance with their demands, his new tactic was clear. Seeking to confine the terms of the protests to their original cause ? the park ? he had hoped to defuse the wider issue of how two weeks of protests have created a permissive space for a new opposition to a decade of AKP rule. As that backfired, Erdogan has been pushed back to his default position of the last two weeks: demonising those who stand against him, issuing threats and offering ill-shaped conspiracy theories designed to mobilise his base. At the heart of this crisis has been a failure on Erdogan's part to fully grasp the nature of the protests. Writing in the Turkish daily Hürriyet last week, Taha Ozan, director of the Seta thinktank, which is close to the AKP, reflected some of the difficulties Erdogan has encountered. Ozan writes: "Erdogan faced the accusations of totalitarianism with only one response: 'Do not come to me with abstract accusations that are outside the realm of politics. Can you give me specific and tangible examples?' This simple question does not have a tangible response other than: 'We are afraid and we feel repressed'." If anything has changed in the last few days, it is that Erdogan and other senior officials appear to have recognised, at least, that such fears can be contagious. What is clear is that there are growing political dangers in the crisis for Erdogan and his style of government that predate the protests. According to a Gallup poll taken before the protests, the government's approval rating has been declining. That trend is most marked in Istanbul, where it has dropped from 59% in 2011 to 30% in 2012, while in the rest of Turkey it has fallen from 57% to 48%. On the international stage too, the past two weeks have damaged Turkey's reputation, crucially in Europe, where a group of countries led by Germany have put further brakes on the glacial EU accession talks because of the violence used against the protesters. Ziya Meral, a Turkish academic based in the UK, believes that the protests are rooted in a complex clash of ideas and personal values that has arisen during an AKP era of economic policies that created a new, tech-savvy consumer society, especially in cities, whose growing economic and social autonomy is now at odds with how Erdogan and the AKP believe Turkish society should be. Their expectation has long been institutionalised in Turkish society, where journalists, university professors and even doctors have been required to conform and help shape public attitudes. "It's not a clash between an Islamist party and secularists ? instead, it represents a postmodern crisis for Turkey," Meral said. "Erdogan and the AKP came into power rejecting the old-school style of Islamist politics that had come before. They wanted economic improvement and they wanted to be open to the world. "The shift came after 2011. By then, the military was no longer a force. Consumption was increasing. The EU was out of the picture with its own troubles. With its large majority, [the AKP] started behaving as previous governments had done ? insisting on being the 'gatekeeper' of the Turkish identity, while emphasising majoritarianism over pluralism." If in the past "gatekeeping" meant enforcing a strict vision of secular nationalism, today it means creeping socially conservative Islamist values, the most recent iteration of which ? described by many people as the "last straw" ? has been tighter limits on the sale of alcohol. For many in Gezi Park, this is precisely the issue: the conflict between their growing desire for personal autonomy in the new Turkey and state-prescribed notions of "Turkishness". But the crisis has been exacerbated by other tensions. There has been deep discontent, not least within the ranks of Erdogan's party, ove e historic peace process with the Kurds, and public rumblings over his Syria policy. Erdogan's attempts to rewrite the military-era constitution, which would create a presidential system of government, have aroused suspicion that the new system would most benefit the prime minister himself. All of these complaints have been reflected in the protests as the demonstrations have rippled outwards, drawing in an uneasy coalition of often contradictory interests. Indeed, the worst of the violence last week, during the clearing of Taksim Square, saw Kurds and Kemalists ? secular nationalist followers of the founder of the modern Turkish state ? standing shoulder to shoulder with anarchists and environmentalists all pursuing their own agendas. Like Meral, political analyst Ihsan Dagi ? who has written extensively on the AKP's time in power ? believes that the friction in Turkish society is a direct result of the party's own policies. The protesters in Gezi Park are by and large those who have grown up under and often benefited from the decade of AKP rule. "Erdogan looks at how incomes have increased over the past decade and asks, why are people complaining? What he is missing is that in the new consumer society, people believe they have the right to make their own choices about what they buy, how they live and what they choose to drink," said Dagi. Despite believing that Erdogan is fundamentally a pragmatic politician, Dagi suspects that some of the prime minister's mistakes in the last fortnight stem from both his own sense of being under attack and his need to appeal to his core voters by sounding defiant in the midst of a crisis. His sense of affront is not entirely surprising. Chants in Gezi Park have ranged from straightforward calls for him to step down to the outright vulgar, including from football "ultras", on Friday night, who shouted: "Tayyip, Tayyip, suck my dick." "Erdogan took it very personally at first," says Dagi. "The reports of people close to him say he saw it as an attempt to force him to resign or harm him so he couldn't stand again." One story tells of a furious PM being calmed by his daughter after storming out of the Ankara meeting with protesters. But Dagi believes that many of Erdogan's problems are of his and his party's making by narrowing the terms of Turkey's political conversation. "The magic formula of the AKP and Erdogan in the last 10 years was that it generally acted in a wider coalition allowing different political ideas and identities. But that started to crumble two years ago and some of the more liberal politicians who felt that they could work with Erdogan turned against him. I think he's realised now that he needs to build bridges again and open dialogue to a wider audience." However, Dagi is still not convinced that Erdogan has understood the real nature of the protests: "He sees it as deeply political, something that needs to be controlled to keep Turkey manageable. But really this is a social resistance, not a political uprising. "This isn't about removing him from power. It's people saying to the AKP and Erdogan there are limits to the powers they try to assume." Turkey's prime minister showed his determination in moving to clear the park with water cannon and teargas. He may have won this battle, but the most serious crisis of Erdogan's 10 years in power is far from over. ............... ERDOGAN: A LIFE Born in February 1954, Erdogan attended an Islamic high school before studying business administration at Marmara University, graduating in 1981. He spent 13 years as a semi-professional footballer, but his father reportedly blocked a move to top club Fenerbahçe. Erdogan's passion for politics was greater: time as a student activist was followed by a decision to join the Islamist Welfare Party after the 1980 military coup in Turkey. A pragmatic approach as mayor of Istanbul from 1994 to 1998 ended with his imprisonment for reciting a poem in public that was regarded as incitement to religious hatred. He established the Justice and Development Party (AKP) after his release and it won a landslide victory at the 2002 general election, taking nearly two-thirds of the seats. In 2011 the AKP was re-elected for a third term. Erdogan married Emine Gulbaran in 1978 and the couple have two sons and two daughters. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org