How Worse Can Turkey Get?
The
other day, another political killing took place in Turkey. Ugur Kurt,
30, was shot dead by a stray bullet to the head while attending a
funeral at a cemevi in Istanbul's Okmeydani neighborhood. It is probable
that the bullet could have come from the gun of a policeman, because
the police were responding with live ammunition at a group of protesters
who were throwing fire bombs at police vehicles.
May Ugur Kurt,
an innocent bystander, rest in peace. His death, however, is likely to
be yet another step in Turkey's deepening political polarization. The
anti-government voices will condemn the "fascist police" of Tayyip
Erdogan. The pro-government voices will condemn the "vandals and
terrorists," to whom the police is only giving a much-deserved response,
besides the imagined "foreign powers" behind these trouble-makers.
The
fact that the killing took place in the courtyard of a cemevi, a place
of worship for the Alevi minority, is particularily risky. It is no
secret that Erdogan is the supreme leader of Turkey's Sunni Islamists,
whereas the opposition has a strong Alevi component. When you add such
sectarian bases to political tensions, things generally get worse.
In
fact, how worse things will get is a question that many wonder these
days. Despite the fact that Turkey was hailed all over the world as a
success story until just a few years ago, we took a sudden downward
spiral. Erdogan wanted to maximize his power and thus provoked strident
reactions. He then interpreted these reactions as conspiratorial "coup
attempts," and further flexed his muscles, only to provoke more
reactions. It is a vicious circle par excellence.
The question is
to what length this vicious circle will continue, and what dangers might
be awaiting Turkey. Widespread unrest, civil war, or a fully
authoritarian regime? These are the very bad scenarios some fear.
However, I don't think things can go that bad, and we will ultimately
recover from the current madness and move forward without too much harm.
I
might be a naive optimist, but it is notable that Kamer Daron Acemoglu,
a world-reknowned Turkish-American economist, seems to agree. In his
recent and notable article in Foreign Affairs, subtitled, "Despite
Erdogan's Ruthlessness, Turkey's Democracy Is Still on Track," he
presents an analysis that offers some comfort. First, he notes that:
"Turkey
is in the middle of a difficult process of institutional rebalancing,
in which key political and social institutions have been shifting their
allegiances away from the military and the large urban-based economic
interests that have long dominated Turkish politics. In the absence of
independent judicial organizations and an organized civil society, the
risk has always been great that any politicians who took power during
this turbulent time would abuse it. In other words, Erdogan's drift from
democracy is lamentable, but almost predictable."
Then, argues
Acemoglu, this "drift from democracy" cannot be too extensive, because
Turkey has a vibrant civil society, a liberal Constitutional Court, and,
most importantly, a developed yet fragile economy that Erdogan cannot
risk sinking by making too many irrational decisions. In other words,
Turkey is structurally evolved enough to rule out both violent internal
conflict and dictatorial rule.
"Despite creeping authoritarianism
and polarization in Turkish politics, one shouldn't despair," Acemoglu
concludes. One should rather try to bring back liberty and reason,
because they are not too far away.
Sunday, May 25, 2014
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