Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

'Democratic' Turkey Kills, Represses Own Citizens

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 'Democratic' Turkey Kills, Represses Own Citizens

    'DEMOCRATIC' TURKEY KILLS, REPRESSES OWN CITIZENS

    http://www.armenianlife.com/2013/06/05/%E2%80%98democratic%E2%80%99-turkey-kills-represses-own-citizens/
    - JUNE 5, 2013
    By Appo Jabarian
    Executive Publisher / Managing Editor
    USA Armenian Life Magazine

    Mr. Erdogan's Turkey was seen as "a runaway success by many in Europe
    and the Middle East; now it is looking tarnished, with deeper problems
    than its allies - and enemies - realized," reported BBC's Middle East
    Editor Jeremy Bowen.

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said Washington was "deeply
    concerned about the numbers of people injured," urging all sides
    to "avoid any provocations or violence. ... We are concerned by
    the reports of excessive use of force by police. ... We obviously
    hope that there will be a full investigation of those incidents and
    full restraint from the police force with respect to those kinds of
    incidents," Kerry told reporters.

    Amnesty International issued several statements calling for Turkish
    authorities to end abusive use of force by police against protesters.

    Amnesty said: "The number of activists injured across Turkey as a
    result of police abuse will continue to escalate unless the authorities
    bring police tactics in line with basic human rights standards. ... The
    authorities have not confirmed the number of people injured, which
    is believed to be in the thousands, some of whom remain in hospital
    in critical state."

    John Dalhuisen, Europe and Central Asia Program Director at
    Amnesty International, noted that "Three days after the start of
    an unprecedented wave of police repression against protesters, the
    Turkish authorities have shown little remorse and no indication of
    a change in police tactics."

    Outspoken American linguist and political philosopher Noam Chomsky
    condemned the brutal police crackdown on protesters denouncing the
    demolition of Taksim Gezi Park, saying it recalled "the most shameful
    moments of Turkish history."

    Activists worldwide staged rallies in solidarity with Turkish
    protesters. In New York, hundreds of protesters gathered in Zuccotti
    Park, the epicenter of the Occupy Wall Street movement, and held a
    rally. They planned to march 3 miles to the Turkish consulate to show
    their support for anti-government protests raging in the heart of
    Istanbul. Similar demonstrations are being held throughout the world.

    Demonstrators proclaimed: "Istanbul is not alone."

    While other 'OccupyGezi' protests have been organized in several major
    US cities, including Austin, Boston and Chicago, the protests are
    quickly taking on a worldwide scope. In Brussels, Turkish nationals
    gathered in front of the EU Parliament to protest against police
    violence in Turkey. Similar rallies showing solidarity with Turkish
    protesters were held in London, Helsinki and outside the Turkish
    Embassy in Nicosia, Cyprus. Protesters in Egypt also planned to gather
    in a few days for a Taksim solidarity protest in front of the Turkish
    Embassy in Cairo.

    In a strong rebuke of Erdogan's neo-Ottoman dictatorial behavior
    and hypocritical foreign policies, Syrian Information Minister Omran
    al-Zohbisaid Turkey's Prime Minister is "terrorizing" his own people,
    calling on the premier to resign his post. "Erdogan is leading
    his country in a terrorist way, destroying the civilization and
    achievements of the Turkish people. ... We wish the Turkish people
    only stability and calm, and urge that Erdogan act wisely and not
    treat the Turks the way he has treated the Syrians," the Syrian
    minister concluded.

    While most of the world honored women on International Women's Day,
    Turkey committed violence against peaceful Turkish women and other
    protesters.

    Alexandra Hudson of Reuters narrated the plight of a well-dressed
    woman protester: "In her red cotton summer dress, necklace and white
    bag slung over her shoulder she might have been floating across the
    lawn at a garden party; but before her crouches a masked policeman
    firing teargas spray that sends her long hair billowing upwards.

    Endlessly shared on social media and replicated as a cartoon on posters
    and stickers, the image of the 'woman in red' has become the leitmotif
    for female protesters."

    Is Turkey's 2013 Taksim Square fast becoming China's 1989
    TiananmenSquare? Taksim has become the epicenter of nationwide protests
    against what critics say is creeping authoritarianism of Mr.

    Erdogan.

    Apologies by Deputy Prime MinisterBulent Arinc for the violent police
    response against peaceful protesters could not pacify the angry Turks.

    Crowds gathered for a fifth consecutive night to continue their
    persistent demands for the Erdogangovernment to step down. The
    widespread protests have metamorphosed into a popular movement that
    seems intent on staging the ouster of Mr. Erdoganfrom power.

    On June 4, the left-wing KESK trade union confederation, representing
    some 240,000 public sector workers, began a two-day strike in support
    of the protests and accused the government of committing "state
    terror". "The state terror implemented against entirely peaceful
    protests is continuing in a way that threatens civilians' life
    safety," the KESK said in a statement, saying the crackdown showed the
    Islamic-rooted government's "enmity to democracy". Another trade union
    confederation, Disk, has said it will join the strike on Wednesday.

    "We have had enough of the wayErdogan understands democracy and the
    way he wants to dictate his rules," said Ozgur Aksoy, a young engineer
    demonstrating in Gezi Park on Monday.

    Gizem Oray, 21, was among a crowd of students dodging tear gas and
    water cannons fired by police in Ankara on June 3. She described how
    two weeks earlier, a roommate and her boyfriend were attacked by a
    group of men wearing Islamic dress for holding hands on the street.

    "These guys would never have dared to do this, in the heart of the
    capital, a few years ago," she said. "This government is responsible,
    there's no other explanation."

    Several protesters complained about economic conditions. Fatma
    HaticeKerkecin, an unemployed decorator, said Turks are "indebted up
    to their necks" and Seda Terkoglu, a 19-year-old high-school student,
    said "constant price hikes are choking us."

    Ozkan Korkmaz, a 19-year-old high-school student, in an interview
    inTaksim, showing the scar on his back where he was hit by a gas
    canister fired by police, lamented: "They're imposing non-scientific
    education on us. ... They're limiting our freedoms, opening lawsuits
    against satirical magazines and cartoonists."

    "We have had enough of the wayErdogan understands democracy and the
    way he wants to dictate his rules," said Ozgur Aksoy, a young engineer
    demonstrating in Gezi Park on Monday.

    While the government underreportedthe number of casualties, Turkish
    human rights groups and doctors said at least two people died and
    thousands more were injured in clashes in Istanbul and 700 in Ankara
    with thousands more in 65 other cities.

    The demonstrations--by a broad cross-section of people, are dominated
    by the young and educated.

    As protesters chanted, the police fired volleys of tear gas to beat
    them back. Some protesters threw rocks or pieces of paving stones,
    before retreating. Others offered each other a milky anti-acid solution
    to ease the gas's burn. Volunteer medics wearing white coats and
    workmen's hat marked with red crosses helped protesters. Some vomited
    on side streets, others needed emergency attention. "I volunteered to
    help here because I believe in the cause. The government has to go,"
    said a man wearing a stethoscope and surgical gloves. "I'll spend as
    time in the Square in the day and come here at night. I'll be here
    as long as it takes."

    Ironically Taksim Square is named after Arabic word "Taksim"
    which means "Division." Deep internal divisions in Turkey are
    nothing new to neo-Ottoman Turkey. Turkey's internal divisions are
    not just betweenKemalists and Islamists. It's also between Turkish
    populace and the Turkish Deep State ("Derin Millet") of which current
    Erdoganadministration is a part of. It is also between denialists
    of the Armenian Genocide and righteous Turks who acknowledge it. And
    it's between moderate Muslim Turks and extremists.

    Despite being 'democratically elected,' Erdogan has been ruling as
    aneo-Ottoman sultan. "Under a decade of AKP rule, Turkey has become
    the world's top jailer of journalists. Its interventionist policy in
    Syria is causing alarm. The systematic and disproportionate use of
    force against the slightest display of dissent obscures that the AKP
    was democratically elected and remains the most popular government in
    modern Turkish history. Yet, egged on by the slavishly self-censoring
    Turkish media, Erdogan seems increasingly out of touch," wroteAmberin
    Zaman for Al-Monitor Turkey Pulse.

    Given the litany of grievances and the confrontational nature of
    Turkish politics, the raging protests come as no surprise. They
    coincide with a rapidly slowing economy that is likely to witness
    moderate growth rates at best for the foreseeable future without
    increased structural reforms. Unfortunately, the Turkish government
    is not expected to undertake major reform initiatives anytime soon,
    especially since the campaigning for the local and presidential
    elections in 2014 and the parliamentary elections in 2015 are already
    underway, reported CNN'sFadi Hakura.

    Mr. Erdogan's brand of Islam has even antagonized his own supporters
    who are devout and moderate Muslims. His stronghold is no more
    Turkish Holy Islam. The current Turkish government has adopted an
    ill-guided policy of exporting international terrorism to Syria via
    Islamic terrorist groups such as Al-Qaeda, Jabhat Al-Nusra (Front) and
    other Muslim extremist groups to destroy Syria's state infrastructures
    that as a secular country continues to serve as an oasis of amicable
    coexistence between moderate Sunnis, Alawites, Christians, Armenians,
    Syriacs, Assyrians, Kurds and other minorities. Followers of Turkish
    Holy Islam strongly disapprove those terrorist groups' despicable
    crimes against humanity in Syria. Just recently, these extremist
    criminal elements massacred the entire population of a Christian
    village in Syria. Mr.Erdogan's reputation both at home and in the
    international arena is directly impacted by such crimes.

    Another problematic Erdogan-sponsored building project that recently
    added to public frustrations was the construction of a third bridge
    over the Bosporus in Istanbul. Initially the prospective bridge was
    given the name of Sultan Selim the Grim, the cruelest adversary
    ofAlevis and Shiites in Ottoman history. Conqueror of Egypt, the
    powerful sultan is known for the massacres of tens of thousands of
    Anatolian Alevis prior to and after his war against Iran. Due to
    widespread Alevi condemnations, Istanbul municipality backtracked
    and decided to simply name it "The Third Bridge."

    It is expected that Kurds, disillusioned with yet another unpromising
    'peace process,' could have a decisive impact on the country's macro
    politics. They have vowed never to allow to be called 'Mountain Turks'
    again by officialdom Turkey, and to ultimately secure Kurdish autonomy.

    On the external front Ankara is highly preoccupied by its losing
    propaganda war against Armenia and Diaspora Armenians. Unlucky for
    Turkey, Armenians are well-armed with the almighty truth about the
    Turkish Genocide of Armenians (1915-1923) and the greatdispossessions
    in terms of massive losses in Turkish-confiscated personal and real
    properties as well as loss of ancestral homelands in Turkish-occupied
    Western Armenia and Cilicia.

    After his landslide re-election in 2007, Mr. Erdogan pledged to govern
    on behalf of all Turks, not just those who voted for him. Apparently
    Mr.Erdogan hasn't even represented those who voted for him. There is
    a growing consensus that had new elections been held today, his 2007
    landslide re-election victory could be followed by a landslide defeat.

Working...
X