Thursday, June 27, 2013
Turkey
Thursday, June 27, 2013 by DXTR corporation
Is Turkey on the verge of a meltdown?
By Fadi Hakura, Special to CNN
June 4, 2013 -- Updated 1328 GMT (2128 HKT)
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Demonstrations in Turkey
- Nationwide anti-government protests are largest in Turkey in decade
- Police crackdown on peaceful protests against plans to demolish park sparked riots
- Protests spread from Istanbul to 67 of 81 of Turkey's provinces
- Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan calls crackdown 'excessive' but says he's not a dictator
Editor's note: Fadi Hakura is the associate fellow and manager of the Turkey Project
at the London-based think-tank Chatham House. He has written and
lectured extensively on Turkey's political, economic and foreign policy
and the relationship between the European Union and Turkey.
(CNN) -- Taksim Square is Istanbul's equivalent to
Cairo's Tahrir Square or London's Trafalgar Square and it is now the
epicenter of demonstrations triggered by construction plans for a
shopping center in one of the city's few remaining green spaces.
What was initially a
small sit-in has morphed into a major series of protests due to -- in
the words of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan -- "excessive
force" by the police.
Fadi Hakura
These protests reflect,
in part, the deep ideological polarization between secular,
liberal-minded Turks, and the more religious Turks, representing a
quarter and two-thirds of the population respectively based on the 2011
general election results.
Many secular Turks
complainthat the Islamist-rooted government is intolerant of criticism
and the diversity of lifestyles. So far, Erdogan's robust and muscular
stance vis-à-vis the demonstrators has reinforced those perceptions.
A typical example cited
by detractors is the government's recent enactment of tight restrictions
on the sale and promotion of alcohol even though the Turkish
government's Household Budget Surveys estimates that only 6 percent of
Turkish households are alcohol drinkers. Less than 1.5 percent of car
accidents in 2012 were alcohol-related according to Turkish economist
Emre Deliveli .
At the same time, critics
are unhappy at the rapid pace of urbanization in Turkey's metropolitan
cities. Erdogan is planning to build a third airport, a third Bosphorus
bridge and a canal linking the Black Sea with the Sea of Marmara, which
are likely to destroy millions of trees and a delicate ecosystem in
northern Istanbul. A staggering $4.7 billion was spent on ambitious
construction projects last year in Istanbul alone.
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.
Despite the rising
emotions sweeping Turkey, this is not equivalent to the "Arab Spring"
that led to the toppling of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
Unlike Egypt and other Arab countries, Turkey is a functioning, albeit
incomplete, democracy and has been since 1950.
Erdogan received a
resounding mandate of almost half the vote in the last general elections
in 2011. He still remains the most popular politician in Turkey, while
the opposition is widely seen by many Turks as weak and ineffective.
Undoubtedly, the global
media coverage of the riots and the disproportionate security response
has dented the international image of Erdogan and the governing Justice
and Development Party as a progressive force in Turkey's political
scene. Nevertheless, the ultimate determinant of Erdogan's staying power
will be the state of the Turkish economy rather than anti-government
demonstrations.
What's driving unrest and protests in Turkey?
Source:CNN News International
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