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The AKP and Turkey’s Long Tradition of Islamo-Fascism

April 3, 2015 By administrator

By Toni Alaranta (vol. 8, no. 3 of the Turkey Analyst)

Those who claim that democracy in Turkey has been handicapped because of the repressive “Kemalist” regime overlook that the conservative right has totally dominated Turkish politics. It is the traditions of the Turkish right that need to be scrutinized in the search for the matrix of current undemocratic practices. The Turkish Islamist poet and political ideologue Necip Fazıl Kısakürek is a key figure in this context. He propagated for a totalitarian Islamist-fascist regime in Turkey, to be ruled by an Islamic version of a Führer. And today representatives of the AKP point out that understanding Kısakürek is a precondition to understand the great “cause” (“dava”) that the AKP represents. Report turkeyanalyst.org

BACKGROUND: To make the claim that Turkey’s governing Justice and Development Party (AKP) would have anything to do with “Islamic fascism” at first appears astonishing. This is, after all, a party that was for many years defined – by itself and by sympathetic observers in the West – as the Turkish equivalent to Western conservative-democratic parties. The dominant scholarship on modern Turkey has for several decades produced an image of an authoritarian and even fascist Kemalist regime that was ended by the “democratic” Muslims of the AKP. Two fundamental mistakes have thus been committed: one concerns the nature of the regime that the AKP replaced and the second is about the nature of the Islamists.

The narrative peddled by the AKP and its supporters is that the party has ushered in democracy by putting an end to what is portrayed as a regime run by elitist Kemalists, Westernizers who were alien to the culture of their own country, and who for eighty years supposedly suppressed the Anatolian conservative Muslims; and these latter are taken to be the sole and legitimate expression of the popular will.

That there was such a wide expectation that the AKP would indeed usher in pluralist, liberal values and democratization in Turkey was to a considerable degree based on the Turkish liberals’ role in legitimating the party as the “voice of the oppressed.” From their chairs in prestigious universities, for nearly two decades, liberal Turkish academics drummed in the message of how the awful “Kemalist state” was repressing and harassing pious Muslims. In doing this, they uncritically – and certainly very usefully – reproduced and transmitted the most emotionally powerful narrative trope used by the Turkish Islamist movement.

In reality, a “Kemalist state” has not existed in Turkey since the end of the Republican

People’s Party’s (CHP) one-party regime in 1950. With the coming to power of the conservative Democrat Party at that date, the Turkish regime ceased to be based on the idea of radical and utopian modernization; from then on, it has effectively been a nationalist-conservative regime that has made considerable use of religious symbols and themes. In this sense the “normalization” process attached to the AKP was consummated already during the 1950s, when, in the words of British scholar David McDowall, the Democrat Party government “assisted the revival of traditional Islamic values at the heart of the state.”

Secondly, the notion of conservative Anatolian Muslims as a “natural” force that would compel the authoritarian Turkish state to democratize represents an enormous misrepresentation of the Turkish socio-political reality. The tradition of Turkish conservative and Islamist parties is fundamentally undemocratic. If one scratches the surface of the AKP’s ideological background, it becomes clear that the party’s agenda is deeply undemocratic. The only major difference between the current AKP and the previous Islamist parties is that the AKP has learned to adjust its economic policies to the global free market regime. Through economic liberalization, inaugurated by Turgut Özal, prime minister and later president, during the 1980s the Anatolian conservative middle class was integrated to the global economy.

IMPLICATIONS:  Those who claim that democracy in Turkey has been handicapped because of the repressive “Kemalist” regime somehow manage to overlook that the conservative right has totally dominated Turkish politics; it is the traditions of the Turkish right that need to be scrutinized in the search for the matrix of current undemocratic practices.

The AKP is in fact a large ideological coalition that has absorbed both the nationalist-conservative tradition – represented by conservatives like Adnan Menderes, Süleyman Demirel and Turgut Özal – and the Islamist tradition that was led by Necmettin Erbakan from the early 1970s to the 1990s. In addition, the AKP until recently collaborated with the movement of Fethullah Gülen, the leading “civil society” component of the Turkish Islamist movement.

Ali Bulaç, who is one of the leading intellectuals within the Gülenist camp, has pointed out that the “political” (AKP and previously the Islamist “National Outlook” parties) and the “cultural” (in particular the Gülen movement) components of Turkey’s Islamist movement share a common ideological background. This common background is the İttihad-i Muhammedi Fırkası (Islamic Union Party) established in 1909, during the Second Constitutional Era of the Ottoman Empire. According to Bulaç, it was within the ranks of this party that Turkish first modern Islamic intellectuals emerged, and they have provided the intellectual basis for both the “political” and the “cultural” manifestations of the Islamic movement.

When one takes a thorough view on the dominant articulation of the religious and conservative constituency from the 1950s to the contemporary AKP, there is nothing that points towards genuine pluralism.   The Islamist-conservative poet and political ideologue Necip Fazıl Kısakürek (1904-1983) is in many ways a key figure in this context, and his writings are revealing. Kısakürek is the esteemed partisan of both Turkish nationalist-conservative and Islamist circles. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan especially admires Kısakürek, often reciting his poems in public. Indeed, several representatives of the AKP have stated that understanding Kısakürek is a precondition to understand the great “cause” (“dava”) that the AKP represents. However, the admiration expressed for Kısakürek is ill-boding: he never hid that he hated parliamentary democracy.

Political scientist Taner Timur has recently noted that Kısakürek was not only a poet but an ideologue who propagated for the introduction of a totalitarian Islamist-fascist regime in Turkey, to be ruled by an Islamic version of a Führer, that is, a “supreme leader” (called “Başyüce”).

Erdoğan is yet to implement Kısakürek’s program in detail; but his attempt to establish presidential rule and the way the majority’s Sunni Islamic faith is increasingly presented as the only legitimate expression of the national will is worryingly well in line with Kısakürek’s blueprint for an Islamic-fascist regime.

During the 1950s, Kısakürek published his articles in the magazine Büyük Doğu (Great East), in which he called for the banning of CHP, the Republican People’s Party. It is thus noteworthy that Erdoğan, who has made such an enormous issue about the “Kemalists” always supporting party closures, himself admires a man who called for the banning the political organization of his opponents.

Kısakürek’s writings offer keen insights into the way the Turkish Islamists relate to a notion such as freedom. According to Kısakürek, freedom is not a goal, but a tool, because a human being is not free in that sense: a dog and a donkey are free, but a human being is made by his Creator and thus above a mere nature and its meaningless “freedom.” The Turkish Islamists have not in any way abandoned the basic idea according to which a human being is not “free”: according to the ideological worldview of Islamists, the kind of freedom espoused by European Enlightenment – within which man measures all things by solely depending on his rational mind – is a perversion. Also those who are deemed “moderate” share this worldview.

When key AKP figures speak about their mission, to build a “New Turkey” and to “close a hundred year old parenthesis” – as Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu has recently said – they refer not only to the Young Turk and Kemalist Westernization project, but to the whole of the modernization project that started in the Ottoman Empire in the latter part of the 18th century. There is a telling statement in this respect in Kısakürek’s key work İdeolocya Örgüsü, (“Plait of Ideology,” published in 1977): “Ever since the Tanzimat [the “Reorganization” reforms of the beginning of the 19th century], the ongoing artificial reforms, and the artificial heroes produced by these reforms, have been the main problem obstructing our cause.”

Also the highly emotional discourse which makes a radical distinction between the elitist, westernized so called “white Turks” and the supposedly “real” and “authentic” nation composed of so called “black Turks,” which has been widely disseminated by AKP and its partisans in pro-government think tanks and media, emanates directly from Kısakürek.

CONCLUSIONS: The earlier assumptions about the AKP – that the party’s political mission and ideology is to produce and disseminate a “healthy synthesis” of Western political thinking and Islamic religious-political traditions – were deeply flawed. From the İttihad-i Muhammedi Fırkası to Necip Fazil Kısakürek and the current AKP, the Turkish Islamist tradition selectively utilizes Western political concepts, but ultimately its purpose is to reject them in order to rebuild an allegedly more superior and legitimate, “authentic” Islamic socio-political order.

The AKP is a deeply anti-western political movement. It does not aim to “correct” or “normalize” past “excesses” but to annihilate the republican and Ottoman secularizing-westernizing reforms altogether. Unlike in previous decades, the Turkish Islamic movement has now made its peace with the state – by totally conquering it. President Erdoğan did not suddenly change from a genuine democrat to an authoritarian Islamist: the ideological and organizational matrix of the AKP is deeply undemocratic.

Toni Alaranta, Ph.D., is a senior research fellow at the Finnish Institute of International Affairs. He is the author of the forthcoming book National and State Identity in Turkey: The Transformation of the Republic’s Status in the International System (Rowman & Littlefield, 2015). His previous publications include Contemporary Kemalism: From Universal Secular-Humanism to Extreme Turkish Nationalism (Routledge, 2014).

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, Erdogan, Islamo-Fascism, Turkey

Turkish Dictator Erdogan: Armenia fixed April 24 ceremonies to coincide with Gallipoli events

March 30, 2015 By administrator

Edogan-Nato-Islamic-200President of Turkey said Armenia had fixed April 24 date to coincide with the anniversary of the Battle of Gallipoli.

In an interview with France 24 television, Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey is commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Gallipoli Battles and “we are in no position to obtain permission from Armenia”.

“It is a date in history and it has nothing to do with the ceremonies in Armenia. Quite on the contrary, they fixed their ceremonies to coincide with our date,” Erdogan said.

Speaking about problems between Armenia and Turkey, he said it was Ankara that always “took a positive step”and “extended our hand in peace”.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: #armenianGenocide, Armenia, Erdogan

Iran accuses Turkish leader Erdogan of fomenting regional strife

March 27, 2015 By administrator

Iranian Foreign Minister  Zarif attends Human Rights Council at UN in GenevaDUBAI (Reuters) – Iran’s foreign minister accused Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan on Friday of fomenting strife in the Middle East, rebuffing his accusation that Iran was trying to dominate the region.

“It would be better if those who have created irreparable damages with their strategic mistakes and lofty politics would adopt responsible policies,” Mohammad Javad Zarif was quoted as saying by the semi-official Fars news agency.

“Under the current circumstances, all countries must work toward establishing stability and preventing the spread of insecurity in the region,” Zarif, who is attending negotiations on Iran’s disputed nuclear program in Switzerland, added.

Erdogan declared his support on Thursday for a Saudi-led military operation in Yemen targeting the Houthis, and suggested the group’s links to Tehran were evidence of Iranian ambitions.

“Iran is trying to dominate the region… This has begun annoying us, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf countries. This is really not tolerable and Iran has to see this,” Erdogan said at a press conference.

He later implied in a television interview that Iran had forces inside Yemen, saying that “Iran and the terrorist groups must withdraw”.

Tehran supports the Houthis but denies giving them military support or having its own forces in Yemen.

Saudi Arabia and Arab allies launched air strikes against Houthi targets in Yemen on Thursday and Friday in support of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, whose forces had been pushed back to the southern city of Aden.

Tensions between Iran and Turkey have increased as Iran has taken a larger role in the fight against Islamic State. Iran has sent military commanders to lead irregular forces in Iraq and Syria, both of which border Turkey.

(Reporting by Babak Dehghanpisheh; Writing by Sam Wilkin; editing by Ralph Boulton)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: accuses, Erdogan, Iran, leader, Turkish

Turkish cartoonists sentenced to jail for insulting Erdoğan

March 25, 2015 By administrator

Ayşegül Usta – ISTANBUL

28499585Two cartoonists for the popular satirical weekly Penguen have been jailed to 11 months in prison, over a satirical piece on free speech in which they were convicted of including a hidden gesture “insulting” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

Cartoonists Bahadır Baruter and Özer Aydoğan were sued for the Aug. 21, 2014, cover of the magazine, which satirized Erdoğan’s election as Turkey’s president. In the drawing, Erdoğan is seen asking whether officials at the new presidential palace in Ankara have prepared “any journalists to slaughter,” referring to ritual sacrifice in Islam, to mark his inauguration.

Soon after the publication, a Turkish citizen named Cem Safcıer filed a complaint to the Prime Ministry, arguing that the “ball-shaped” hand gesture of the official welcoming Erdoğan in the cartoon is used to imply that the person being addressed is homosexual.

A prosecutor then prepared an indictment to open a lawsuit, claiming that the hand gesture was “against the ethical and cultural norms of Turkish society” and “went beyond the right of criticism to insult.”

Erdoğan’s lawyers, who stepped into the case, sided with the prosecutor, demanding that the court punish the cartoonists for “insulting a public official.”

The cartoonists, who faced a prison sentence of up to two years, defended themselves in the first hearing of the case at the 2nd Criminal Court of First Instance in Istanbul March 19.

“If you look at the whole picture, you see that the joke has got nothing to do with the gesture. There is no such joke technique,” Baruter said.

Aydoğan also pleaded not guilty, arguing that Baruter drew the picture as he conceived it and “such a simple thing could not be included in this joke.”

The court, however, sentenced both cartoonists to 14 months in prison on March 24. Considering the “good conduct” of the cartoonists during the trial, the court decreased the sentence to 11 months and 20 days, before converting it to a fine of 7,000 Turkish Liras for each convict.

The crime of “insult” is normally punished by three months in prison according to Turkish law. However, if the complainant is a public servant, the prison term is extended to one year. If the “insult” is conveyed “publicly,” such as via a media outlet, the law stipulates an extra one-sixth increase in the prison term.

Risk of trial for insulting prosecutor, too

Despite the “good conduct” decrease in the verdict, Baruter now faces another trial due to his defense which prompted the court to file a separate criminal complaint. Baruter told the court in his March 19 defense that the “wrong interpretation of the hand gesture by the prosecutor could be related to his subconscious.” The court considered the remark another insult, this time against the prosecutor.

This is not the first time Erdoğan has sued Penguen. He previously demanded 40,000 Turkish Liras in compensation from the magazine after they published a cover depicting the then-prime minister as various animals.

The magazine published that cover to support cartoonists from daily Cumhuriyet and daily Evrensel, who were earlier condemned to pay non-pecuniary damages to Erdoğan. A court in Ankara ruled to dismiss that case in 2006.

More than 70 people in Turkey have been prosecuted for “insulting” Erdoğan since he was elected president in August 2014. Cumhuriyet Editor-in-Chief Can Dündar testified in Istanbul on Feb. 26 over allegations that he insulted the head of state in an interview with a prosecutor who had been investigating corruption, describing the process as a “kind of deterrence policy.”

Most recently on March 9, a local journalist in southern Turkey was given a five-month suspended prison sentence, while the houses of two more journalists from the same city were raided by police, all for “insulting” Erdoğan on their social media accounts.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Cartoonists, Erdogan, insulting

Erdoğan Belligerent call Bring your documents, gagrulenet Video Respond

March 23, 2015 By administrator

zombi-Erdogan-1915-2015-colorgagrule.net Respond to Bring your documents, Erdoğan belligerent calls on Armenian diaspora over 1915 massacres

 

 

 

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Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 1915 massacre, documents, Erdogan

Alex Christie-Miller, is utterly disgusting, Erdogan changing the date of Gallipoli

March 21, 2015 By administrator

4STBl_l2_biggerThe change in date of this year’s commemorations has been widely perceived as a crude attempt to distract attention from Armenian commemorations of the 1915 massacres and forced deportations which decimated the Ottoman Armenian population, which Armenians — who consider the events of 1915 to constitute genocide — commemorate on April 24. “The game TR gov’t is playing with Gallipoli – politicising it to compete with Armenian Genocide commemorations – is utterly disgusting, IMO [in my opinion],” Alex Christie-Miller, an İstanbul-based journalist working for The Times, Newsweek Europe and the Christian Science Monitor, posted on his Twitter account on March 19.

Joost Lagendijk, a former Green Party deputy in the European Parliament who also served as the co-chairman of the EU-Turkey Joint Parliamentary Committee, also criticized Turkey’s move to commemorate the Gallipoli Campaign on the same day as the Armenian commemorations, calling it a “shameless and all-too-transparent effort” to try and distract attention from the Armenian “Genocide” in his Today’s Zaman column on March 17. Lagendijk said that shifting the 100th anniversary of the Gallipoli Campaign to the same day “won’t work and it will unnecessarily discredit Turkey.”

Turkey’s move also offended Turkish citizens of Armenian descent. Speaking to Agos ­– a Turkish-Armenian weekly formerly edited by murder victim Hrant Dink — after Erdoğan’s invitation, many Turkish citizens of Armenian descent reacted strongly to Erdoğan’s invitation to Sarksyan, calling it a “joke” and an “ill-mannered” act, and further criticizing it as a “political maneuver.”

 

The game TR gov’t is playing with Gallipoli – politicising it to compete with Armenian Genocide commemorations – is utterly disgusting, IMO.

— Alex Christie-Miller (@AChristieMiller) March 19, 2015

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, disgusting, Erdogan, gallipoli, Genocide

Turkey: Whistleblower “Fuat Avni” claims Erdoğan apologized to Sisi at secret meeting in Saudi Arabia

March 21, 2015 By administrator

erdogan-sisiA government whistleblower who tweets under the pseudonym Fuat Avni has alleged that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan apologized to Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi during a secret meeting in Saudi Arabia earlier this month.

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’ met with king Salman of Saudi Arabia in Riyadh on March 2, only one day after Sisi’s visit, prompting speculation that Saudi Arabia played a mediating role between Turkey and Egypt with the aim of repairing relations between the two countries, which have been at odds for several years.

Erdoğan has been one of the leading critics of Sisi, Egypt’s former military head, ever since he came to power after removing former President Mohamed Morsi — the country’s first democratically elected and a member of the MB — via a military coup in July 2013. President Erdoğan has also accused the international community of hypocrisy for giving legitimacy to Sisi and not taking a stand against him after the coup in Egypt.

Fuat Avni tweeted on Friday night that Erdoğan had sent three mediators to Sisi to mend ties and the Egyptian president was convinced to meet with Erdoğan after new Saudi king interfered in the issue. “Yezid and Sisi met in the presence of the Saudi king in Saudi Arabia. Yezid apologized to Sisi,” the Twitter whistleblower claimed.

Fuat Avni refers to Erdoğan as Yezid, which is a reference to the Umayyad caliph, who according to Islamic belief allowed his opponent Imam Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, to die of thirst in the Battle of Karbala.
The whistleblower also claimed that Erdoğan “begged” Sisi and Salman not to disclose the secret meeting. He also alleged that the president told his inner circle that he would even meet with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: apologized, Erdogan, Sisi

Erdogan has all but destroyed Turkish journalism Yavuz Baydar

March 20, 2015 By administrator

Turkish-riot-policeman-us-008Journalists are being intimidated and imprisoned, while government-friendly moguls are given lucrative contracts. The free media is on the verge of extinction.

‘If alarm for the independence of the Turkish press was already high, those concerns were raised still further soon after the outbreak of the summer demonstrations in 2013 to protect Istanbul’s Gezi Park.’ Photograph: Osman Orsal/Reuters

Among journalists, the truth universally acknowledged is that bad news commands more column inches than good. In Turkey, the even more depressing truism is that much of the bad news has to do with the news industry itself.

Those of us trying to preserve our integrity as journalists fight a constant rearguard action – against proprietors who set little store by integrity, and against a government that tries to accrue power by restricting freedom of expression and ringfencing public debate.

Recent headlines have been devoted to the arrest of the journalist Mehmet Baransu. He was detained for a story he wrote in 2010, based on (literally) a suitcase of military documents, handed over to him by a whistleblowing officer, which implicated senior commanders in an attempted coup d’état, codenamed Sledgehammer.

The subsequent court proceedings – both in their scale and the liberal use of pre-trial detention – proved bitterly controversial. There is little doubt that the government interfered and was more interested in taming its own military than producing justice. The defence was able to cast doubt on the authenticity of some (but by no means all) of the evidence. So there is reason to believe that some of the convictions – suspended pending a retrial – were unsound.

Yet this is not why Baransu has been thrown in prison. He is accused not of misleading the courts but of handling state secrets, despite the fact that he had handed the leaked documents over to state prosecutors. Having got the military under its thumb, the government now requires its cooperation and has turned on the journalist who once made the government’s case.

Worse still, much of the government media is egging the prosecutors on. Imagine Glenn Greenwald being arrested and then the rest of the press urging the authorities to throw away the key. The current state of journalism is only a reflection of how polarised Turkish society has become under the divisive rule of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

Self-censorship is the rule. Many Turkish newsrooms resemble an open prison rather than a creative hive and fear has gripped those of the so-called mainstream media institutions. It is not the fear of ending up in courtrooms or in jail: it is fear of being fired. There is utter professional vulnerability. According to Turkey’s journalist union, only 1.5% of our journalists belong to a union.

The columnist Kadri Gürsel wrote recently that the real aim is to finish off journalism as a whole, and this is a view shared by many. We are witnessing the dismantling of a profession whose independence should be guaranteed by the constitution. The very DNA of Turkey’s fourth estate is being severely tampered with. The aim of the government is to subordinate the media, as a whole if possible, to the political executive.

As I argue in The Newsroom as an Open Air Prison: Corruption and Self-Censorship in Turkish Journalism, a discussion paper that I prepared as Shorenstein Fellow at Harvard Kennedy School last autumn, this is the tragic story of the demise of a profession in one of the most important parts of the world.

This destructive pattern was accelerated by the two police operations in the last days of December 2013, massive investigations into the affairs of four ministers of the majority Justice and Development party (AKP) government. Those touched by the corruption scandals included a number of businessmen with close connections to the government, bureaucrats and bank managers, but also Bilal Erdoğan, son of the prime minister.

Of even greater concern is that the investigations appeared to suggest that senior government figures were engaged in sanctions-busting against Iran, and that these senior figures had links to financiers who laundered funds for al-Qaida.

The files compiled by law enforcement and prosecutors were a burning fuse: they claimed to expose a vast network of organised crime, with evidence of bribery, abuse of power and widespread corruption at the very highest echelons of power.Corruption of the nation’s media was at the heart of these allegations. A critical part of the investigation – backed by legal wiretappings – concerned consortiums to co-finance media entirely in favour of the AKP government. This joint effort, in which businessmen benefiting from government contracts paid into a common slush fund, gave rise to the term “pool media”.

A landmark in this targeting of media independence was reached with the blackout implemented by the media itself on the story of 34 Kurdish villagers killed by Turkish fighter jets in the Iraqi border village of Uludere/Roboski in late 2011. That silence became a dress rehearsal for the media surrendering its role as the watchdog of the public interest.

Yet if alarm for the independence of the Turkish press was already high, those concerns were raised still further soon after the outbreak of the summer demonstrations in 2013 to protect Istanbul’s Gezi Park. Protests spread to 78 of the 81 provinces in Turkey. The degree of self-censorship became so intense that the mainstream Turkish media itself became the subject of demonstration and open ridicule. Even so, Erdoğan declared that critical media – domestic and international – were part of a conspiracy to topple him and his government from power. Thereafter the demonisation of independent journalism gathered pace. Journalists who tried to defend their independence and dignity found themselves fired or dispatched to professional limbo.

The developing story of high-level corruption (reaching the very heights of the political establishment – a dream for any decent journalist anywhere in the world) was declared by the news management to be an area surrounded by “barbed wire.” Thus, 2014 began with a self-censorship more institutionalised and internalised than ever before. Blocked by political and institutional pressure, the core of Turkey’s dedicated and defiant journalists migrated their craft online. Social media and independent news sites began to fill a vacuum. The government’s reaction was to try to shut down YouTube and Twitter, but this proved technically difficult and legally unsuccessful.

Still Erdoğan is undeterred; the internet remains a target and vulnerable to government interference. Between 2013 and the end of 2014, the government imposed more than 20 news blackouts on important stories, on various grounds including national security. This was a normalisation of censorship.

Intimidation is normal, too. According to the latest report on 2014 by Independent Communication Network (BiA) there are currently 22 journalists in jail. More than 61 have been found guilty of defamation against Erdoğan in the past three years. On 14 December 2014 two of the remaining critical media outlets – Zaman and STV – were raided, their top managers arrested. Hidayet Karaca, the general manager of Samanyolu Media Group, has been detained for more than 80 days. His charges arise from a TV script.

This continuing process cannot be described as anything other than a purge. The Turkish media industry is systematically losing its qualified workforce, its remaining ethics are vanishing.

With the business groups on board, Erdoğan has simply raised the stakes to enforce dependence: in return for lucrative public contracts, all the media moguls in Turkey have to put their outlets in the service of power. It is a system based on corruption that also requires full complicity. If Erdoğan or his aides do not call the top managers and editors of the media to publish propaganda or censor undesirable content, the owners themselves do it.

The notion of journalism as a check on the irresponsible, corrupt or unfettered exercise of power is evaporating. Investigative reporting, more crucial than ever, is on the verge of extinction. Our democracy now depends on whether the Turkish media can escape the quagmire into which one man’s ambition has driven it.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: destroyed, Erdogan, Journalist, Turkey

Turkey: Aliyev listen to Azerbaijani anthem on Cellphone at andmark ceremony

March 18, 2015 By administrator

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev listens to the Azerbaijani anthem to confirm. (Photo: Cihan)

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev listens to the Azerbaijani anthem to confirm. (Photo: Cihan)

An alleged protocol mistake delayed the play of Azerbaijan’s national anthem during a landmark ceremony in eastern Turkish city of Kars in an incident many described as a “scandal.”

Azerbaijani anthem was supposed to be played after the country’s president, Ilham Aliyev, finished his speech in Kars during the opening ceremony of a school. After the Turkish anthem, officials as well as Aliyev on the podium waited for some time for the Azerbaijani anthem. As the Azerbaijani anthem didn’t play, Erdoğan called the protocol officials and scolded them.

The officials later sat and Aliyev had to return to his seat as the anthem was never played. In the meantime, Education Minister Nabi Avcı pulled out his phone, searched for the Azerbaijani anthem and asked Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan to ask his Azerbaijani counterpart if the anthem was true. Aliyev then nodded to confirm.

Minutes later, Erdoğan took the platform and said a “protocol mistake” should be rectified. Azerbaijani anthem was then played. It was not clear if the anthem was played through Avcı’s cell phone.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Aliyev, anthem, cellphone, Erdogan

#Turkey: ‘Big Brother’ to move into Erdogan’s palace

March 15, 2015 By administrator

Security camera overlooks a man as he walks down a street in London

By Fehim Taştekin

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has an insatiable appetite for control, and is what Westerners call a “control freak.” Erdogan, who gathered the Cabinet at his palace despite the perceptible discomfort of Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who is technically the head of the council of ministers, has frequently tampered with the legislative process in the parliament; targeted the independence of the central bank, which dared not to heed his demands for lower interest rates; consolidated his hold over the judiciary and the police; used his personal contacts to keep the media under his thumb and enjoyed regulating the personal lives of citizens, including how many children they should have. His latest intervention was to prevent the former undersecretary of the National Intelligence Organization (MIT), Hakan Fidan, who had resigned, from running in elections and returning to his former post.

His newest venture is to set up a “Big Brother” system in his controversial palace. It may sound like an exaggeration, but from his control center, Erdogan will be able to keep an eye on 77 million Turkish citizens.

According to a Taraf report by Huseyin Ozay, 143 TV monitors at Erdogan’s White Palace control center will be used to keep an eye on all the closed-circuit television systems in the streets of 81 provinces through Turkey’s Mobile Electronic System Integration (MOBESE) system and transmissions from unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).

The technical infrastructure of this frighteningly ambitious project has been completed and is now being tested. All popular incidents, demonstrations, police and military operations will be monitored. Erdogan will thus be able to manage all the operations of the security forces from his palace.

In addition to UAV and MOBESE data, TV and 3G transmissions can also be monitored from the center. The Gendarmerie, Disasters and Emergencies Management Directorate, the Information and Communication Technologies Authority (BTK) and MIT will be linked there as well.

The MOBESE records of the entire country will be archived on three massive servers. The work station set up by the BTK will enable access to restricted information. In times of military operations, the data at the chief of staff’s operations center will be transmitted to the White Palace control center.

There is currently a Crisis Management Center at the Prime Ministry. The chief of staff’s headquarters houses its combat operations center in a bunker. In the newly completed Foreign Ministry building, there will be a special crisis center. The Shah Euphrates operation for the evacuation of the Tomb of Suleiman Shah in Syria was monitored by Davutoglu at the military operations center. With the new integrated system, Erdogan will be able to control developments from his palace.

Erdogan’s zeal to control all aspects of life in Turkey is surely becoming a top concern in the country. Erdogan is obsessed with maintaining control and cannot tolerate any opposition to his ambitions. For example, he targeted the Constitutional Court as “non-national” because it had ruled against his Twitter ban. Erdogan accused the central bank’s governor, who refused to lower interest rates despite his persistent calls, of “selling out the country.”

Erdogan expressed his anger with social media platforms he can’t control, saying, “Every other day I am becoming more and more against the Internet.”

Erdogan’s obsession became more pronounced after the Gezi Park protests and the December corruption investigations. Many legislative changes were introduced to appease his dislike of investigations and public pressure. The domestic security draft bill now in the parliament is the latest such attempt.

A president may find ways to avoid being labeled a dictator, but Erdogan, with his ambition to control everything in the country, won’t find it easy to avoid accusations of personalizing the state.

Fehim Taştekin
Contributor,  Turkey Pulse

Fehim Taştekin is a columnist and chief editor of foreign news at the Turkish newspaper Radikal, based in Istanbul. He is the host of a fortnightly program called “Dogu Divanı” on IMC TV. He is an analyst specializing in Turkish foreign policy and Caucasus, Middle East and EU affairs. He was founding editor of Agency Caucasus.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Big-Brother, Erdogan, Turkey

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