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ISTANBUL: AK Party and Turkey's near future

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  • ISTANBUL: AK Party and Turkey's near future

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Aug 17 2012


    AK Party and Turkey's near future


    MARKAR ESAYAN
    [email protected]




    I have observed a recent surge in the emails I receive from my readers
    who support the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party). The
    majority of them are considerably disappointed in the party.


    There are several common characteristics shared by those who send me
    these emails: They not only voted for the party -- they seriously
    support it and have been working on a volunteer basis or within the
    party organization for at least 10 years. In a sense, they are the
    unknown heroes who have made the AK Party what it is. If the AK Party
    has managed to established organic ties with the public so
    successfully, it is because of such people who interact with the
    public on an individual basis. These people have worked,
    self-sacrificially, everywhere in Anatolia and all across the country.
    They have enjoyed no personal benefits from their ties to the party,
    but they do have certainly expectations of it.

    What were/are those expectations?

    These people, the `others' of this country, wanted the AK Party to
    create a clean, democratic state. Indeed, seeing them as the others,
    the state had previously used its power to crush these religious
    people, women with headscarves, Kurds, Armenians and anyone labeled as
    dissidents. They wrapped this repression in a
    secular-modern-democratic-Turkey package. And, for a long time, they
    managed to deceive part of the public and the world that they were
    actually secular, modern and democratic. Thus, they argued, if coups
    were being staged and the deep state was committing murders, it was
    because the secular republic was in danger. They had used this as a
    convincing argument to suggest there was a serious reactionary danger
    in the country.

    Many people will remember what happened during the postmodern coup of
    Feb. 28, 1997. Strange people and groups emerged out of the blue and
    engaged in scandals that would make the blood of religious people run
    cold. Yet, the propaganda suggested that these people were
    representing religious groups. The military-guided, neo-nationalist
    (ulusalcı) media outlets published these scandals, including intimate
    images, of so-called leaders of religious orders. In the company of
    these grotesque images and the shocking remarks from these people, the
    argument that a reactionary threat was very close was pumped into the
    public consciousness and subconsciousness. One of the coalition
    partners was a religious party and, since it had come to power, the
    secular republic had been imperiled. This was their thesis.

    Indeed, they managed to overthrow a democratically elected government
    with a military intervention. The media's unrelenting support of the
    coup prevented democratic opposition or any objections to it. Many
    people -- who we could refer to as the voter base of the main
    opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) -- even applauded the coup.
    This was because they believed the secular republic was in danger. So,
    it was a legitimate act for the military to stage a coup to secure the
    regime. They conceded that a coup was not favorable, but, in the
    favorite slogan of those days, they would say, `It is better to go
    back 10 years with a coup than to go back 1,000 years with
    reactionaryism.'

    Today, we know from the investigation into the Feb. 28 coup and the
    media's reports about it that everything done to lay the groundwork
    for the military takeover was false. Instead, it represented a joint
    effort by the military and pro-military media networks, businesses and
    bureaucrats.

    As a result, when the AK Party came to power despite all the
    obstructions it faced in the first elections it entered in 2002,
    religious and liberal groups against whom the Feb. 28 coup had dealt
    the biggest blow welcomed the AK Party with enthusiasm. Unlike its
    predecessors, this party was not monolithic nor self-isolationist.
    They didn't see the US as the devil or the members to the European
    Union as a nightmare. They perceived the country as a whole and were
    working hard to make reforms. And, as a result, a big democratic
    coalition was created in the country. This was the coalition of the
    `weeping children of the Republic.' The main component of this
    coalition consisted of religious people, but liberals, non-Muslim
    religious minorities, liberal leftists, Kurds and some Alevis also
    supported them.

    At that time, the junta planned continuously to overthrow the AK
    Party. To justify the coup, they portrayed the AK Party as an evil
    community with a secret agenda to pretend it was a democratic center
    party and turn the country into Iran when the time was ripe. However,
    democrats, liberals, liberal leftists and intellectuals representing
    non-Muslim religious minorities backed the AK Party, and this did not
    quite fall into place in the usual way, helping to protect the AK
    Party from this propaganda.

    It would be better if I spoke on my own behalf. During that time, I
    wrote articles for the Agos daily newspaper, established by dear Hrant
    Dink, who would be killed a few years later. We, the non-Muslim
    religious minorities, had been frequently victimized by the Kemalist
    neo-nationalists who would pose as modern people but who were actually
    fascists and, therefore, we had developed a serious reaction to being
    `otherified.' For me, a headscarved woman not allowed to become a
    deputy or judge is no different than an Armenian not allowed to become
    a police officer, let alone a high-ranking bureaucrat. If a Kurd is
    tortured or jailed for speaking his/her mother tongue or if an Alevi
    is discriminated against because of his/her sect or if a woman or a
    poor man or a homosexual faces discrimination, then no one can claim
    this country is democratic. In other words, there is a systemic
    problem in that country, not problems specific to Armenians or
    headscarved women.

    In sum, I know well the roots of this discrimination. This evil system
    had to change and be reformed. During the first 80 years of the
    republic, there were so many violations, and the state had turned into
    such a criminal machine that no one save a happy minority could live
    happily if this system did not change. And the public was not willing
    to let this system go on without change. Indeed, the world has seen a
    revolution in information technology. A segment of the religious group
    called the Anatolian Tigers was opened up to the outside world. In
    other words, a bourgeoisie class that was needed for a revolution but
    that had been destroyed by the coup of Sept. 12, 1980, was being
    formed among religious groups. In other words, things had gotten
    started.

    Such an historical background can be found behind the success of the
    AK Party, created by these dynamic groups in the elections of Nov. 3,
    2002. The party managed to act as the political, legitimate and
    peaceful embodiment of this strong demand from the bottom. Serious
    reforms have been implemented. For the first time, legal proceedings
    have been launched against the deep state and junta members. The
    public defended the AK Party against the anti-democratic efforts of
    the still-strong coup supporters. 2007 and 2010 were landmark years.
    For the first time, the government harshly reacted to a military
    memorandum, that of April 27, 2007. And, in 2010, the constitutional
    provisions that gave the tutelage its power were amended in a
    referendum. Judicial bodies were made more democratic and
    constitutional and legal obstacles to the adjudication of members of
    the military and bureaucracy were abolished.

    In the last elections, the AK Party came to power for a third time,
    with over 50 percent of the national vote. This was how the public
    rewarded a party that met their expectations to a great extent. The
    reforms had not completed and the deep state had not been fully
    revealed, but a serious advantage had been earned. It would be easier
    and less dangerous to maintain the reforms with this advantage. This
    was the public's expectation.

    But this didn't happen. In particular, the Uludere tragedy -- in which
    34 civilians were mistaken for terrorists and killed by military
    airstrikes in Å?ırnak's Uludere district due to false intelligence --
    and the AK Party's cold attitude toward the tragedy came as a shock
    not only to religious Kurds, but to all supporters of the AK Party.
    The AK Party acted not as their old party, but as the old state. The
    AK Party's supporters were also disappointed when the match-fixing law
    was amended and the prime minister openly opposed the investigation
    into the Feb. 28 coup.

    Lack of political movement that can gain public trust

    Here are some points that must be emphasized. First of all, and as a
    general rule in life, a lack of competition, alternatives and rivals
    has made the party overly self-confident. Indeed, neither the CHP nor
    the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) exhibits the dynamism needed to
    come to power without a miracle or the AK Party making a serious
    error. For a long time to come, it seems, no political movement will
    emerge in Turkey that will earn the public's trust and send the AK
    Party packing.

    The second is exhaustion. We are talking about 10 years of conflicts
    and adventures that must have exhausted the prime minister and the
    party's senior executives. If we were a Western democracy, the party's
    leader would change and the problem would be automatically solved, but
    Turkey is still a country in which the political arena is dominated
    with the cult of the leader.

    Third, the AK Party falsely believes that it has dominated the state
    and the bureaucracy with its undeniable successes. That is, the AK
    Party has evolved into an Ankara party, paying heed to the excuses of
    bureaucrats rather than the demands of the public.

    The fourth is the lack of democratic maturity of the AK Party and its
    senior executives. The majority of the AK Party's senior executives,
    including the prime minister, do not have the democratic heritage
    needed to take the country's democratic progress further. That's why
    they cannot cope with the public's democratic demands and fall short
    of being on par with the public's democratic maturity. They don't have
    sufficient democratic capital. To accumulate this capital, they need
    time and experience, but Turkey has no time to lose.

    In conclusion, we are going through expected developments. It may be
    possible to mechanically solve in eight years the problems that have
    accumulated over 80 years, but we need more time to overcome
    mentality-related problems.

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