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Is Turkey still a democracy?

  

Category:  World News

Via:  community  •  8 years ago  •  10 comments

Is Turkey still a democracy?

What has happened to Turkey? Four years ago, it was held up by the West as a model for the Muslim world: a democracy (albeit flawed) that was negotiating EU membership and advancing towards a peace settlement with its Kurdish minority.

It was seen as an anchor of stability in the volatile Middle East - although critics here believe the perception from outside was already skewed.

This week, the World Justice Project's rule of law index placed Turkey 99th of 113 countries, just behind Iran and Myanmar. It has reclaimed its place as the world's main jailer of journalists. A couple of analysts who I asked to interview for this piece were unwilling to be quoted, for fear of speaking out.

"It is the end of democracy", the HDP's Deputy President Hisyar Ozsoy told the BBC.

"We didn't have much democracy anyway, but even the very limited democratic space is totally wiped out".

 

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Larry Hampton
Professor Quiet
link   seeder  Larry Hampton    8 years ago

Consider what has happened in the past week:

  • The co-mayors of the largest Kurdish-majority city, Diyarbakir, were arrested for alleged links to the PKK Kurdish militants, which Turkey and the West label a terrorist group.
  • Another 10,000 civil servants were dismissed, charged with supporting Fethullah Gulen, the US-based cleric whom the government believes masterminded the failed coup. This takes the number of suspended or dismissed public servants since July to 100,000.
  • A further 137 academics in Ankara were served with an arrest warrant for alleged Gulen links. Some 37,000 people have now been arrested since July.
  • The law was changed to allow President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to choose university rectors, instead of academics electing a candidate.
  • Fifteen more media outlets were closed. Around 170 have been shut since July.
  • The editor, cartoonist, and other staff at Turkey's oldest mainstream newspaper, Cumhuriyet, were arrested on charges of supporting the PKK and Fethullah Gulen. Cumhuriyet is a bastion of secularism that has regularly condemned Kurdish militancy and the Islamist Gulen movement.
  • The leaders and several MPs of Turkey's third largest political party, the pro-Kurdish HDP, were arrested for alleged links to the PKK. Party supporters say it's an attempt to push the HDP out of parliament and increase Mr Erdogan's power. Hours later, a car bomb killed nine people in Diyarbakir. The government blamed the PKK, but the so-called Islamic State issued a questionable claim of responsibility.
  • The government cut the internet to southeast Turkey and "throttled" services such as WhatsApp, Twitter and private networks (VPNs) across the country, slowing them down to make them unusable.
  • The Turkish lira plummeted to a record low against the US dollar.
  • After criticism from the EU, with the head of the European Parliament saying Turkey had "crossed a red line", the prime minister hit back with, "Brother, we don't care about your red line… we draw another red line on top of yours", and the president accused Germany of harbouring terrorists.
 
 
 
Enoch
Masters Quiet
link   Enoch  replied to  Larry Hampton   8 years ago

Dear Friend Larry Hampton: The Turkish government crack down led by Erdowan is the opposite of a Democratic way to lead. 

Enoch.

 
 
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Expert
link   Perrie Halpern R.A.    8 years ago

How do I say this?

no.

But we will continue to have relations with them.

 

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   Kavika     8 years ago

NO, I'll say it again, NO.

 
 
 
PJ
Masters Quiet
link   PJ    8 years ago

Well I just hope things remain stable enough for me to get on my connecting flight through Turkey in another couple hours.  

 

 
 

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