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A defining moment for Turkey as it straddles East and West

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  • A defining moment for Turkey as it straddles East and West

    A defining moment for Turkey as it straddles East and West

    editorial

    June 07, 2013

    SINCE THE Arab Spring revolutions broke out two and half years ago,
    many Westerners have held up Turkey as the model for a modern Muslim
    nation. But images from Istanbul's Taksim Square of brutal police
    attacks against peaceful demonstrators over the past week are now
    threatening to shatter that image.

    Hundreds of thousands of people across Turkey took to the streets in
    outrage, only to be met by security forces using tear gas, batons, and
    water cannons. At least two people have died, and unconfirmed reports
    put the injury toll at over 2,000. Physicians on the ground are
    accusing police of deliberately harming protesters. Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has largely shrugged off the situation, must
    step in to end any continuing violence.

    Moreover, the unrest should serve as a wake-up call to Erdogan and his
    government, which has been in power since 2003. They must listen
    seriously to the demands of the protesters. What began as a small
    sit-in to save a city park from being demolished to make room for a
    shopping mall has become an eruption of popular discontent - including
    from some Erdogan supporters - toward an elected but increasingly
    uncompromising leader who has sponsored runaway development,
    discouraged political opposition, jailed journalists on questionable
    grounds, and attempted to impose a conservative lifestyle on one of
    the Muslim world's more secular societies, including recent
    restrictions on alcohol sales and proposed curbs on abortion.

    With good reason, the White House has stressed the need to uphold `the
    fundamental freedoms of expression, assembly, and association.' US
    Ambassador Francis Ricciardone has emerged as an important advocate
    for press freedom in Turkey. But as one of the country's strongest
    allies, the United States should also play a larger role in pressuring
    the Erdogan government to respect those democratic values in practice.

    Vowing to move forward with the demolition of the park, Erdogan has
    unhelpfully blamed the demonstrations on extremists. He has noted that
    his party took nearly 50 percent of the vote in the last elections, as
    if that statistic validated every policy decision he might make. He
    has railed against social media, calling it `the worst menace to
    society,' and clamped down on conventional media more conspicuously
    than ever. As the world watched clashes between police and protesters
    last weekend, CNN Turk, a leading news network, aired a cooking show
    and nature documentaries. On Wednesday, 25 protesters were arrested
    for supposedly `spreading untrue information' on Twitter.

    Yet, unlike in Egypt or Tunisia, where long-serving strongmen governed
    with little regard to public sentiment, Erdogan can't just ignore the
    message that he's overreached. Turkey has a history of free elections
    going back to 1950. Erdogan cannot run for a third term as premier but
    is believed to be staging instead a run for president in 2014. The
    current protests show a significant undercurrent of dissent, and
    unhappy Turks must be sure their voices are heard at the ballot box.

    http://www.bostonglobe.com/editorials/2013/06/06/turkey-faces-defining-moment-straddles-east-and-west/OnbCZcqpx6jZDZsZ79Z3NK/story.html

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