Turkey Fears ISIL Radicalism Could Spill Over From Syria, Iraq
(VOA)
-- With the Sunni jihadist group ISIL stepping up attacks in Syria
along the border with Turkey, concern is growing in Turkey that the
violence could spill over.
Earlier this month, Istanbul's Jafari
Muhamadiye Mosque a mosque belonging to Turkey's Shi'ite Muslim minority
was burned down. The attack was blamed on ISIL and is seen as a
possible harbinger of future ISIL attacks, which could threaten Turkey's
complex social fabric.
Istanbul is home to large numbers of
adherents of both Sunni Islam and Shi'ite Islam -- or Jafari Islam, as
the latter is known in Turkey. But tensions between the two groups have
been rising following the arson attack.
Speaking in the burned
out ruins of his mosque, Imam Hamza Aydin said he has no doubt
sectarianism was the motive for the attack.
Aydin said that just
before the attack, a group of men came to the mosque, and said that
Jafaris "worship stones" and threatened to set fire to the mosque.
He said mosque authorities went to the police, but they did nothing.
Turkey's
neighbors Iraq and Syria have seen growing sectarian strife between
Sunnis and Shi'ites, blamed mainly on the emergence of ISIL, which now
calls itself simply the Islamic State. The group regards Shi'ites as
heretics.
Analyst Sinan Ülgen of the Carnegie Europe Institute in
Brussels said fears are growing that ISIL's sectarian war is coming to
Turkey,
"There are allegations that some members of a network that
claim to be close to ISIL have engineered this," Ülgen said. "Some of
these militants groups have been able to establish their networks over
the years, at the time the Turkish government turned (a) blind eye to
many of these opposition groups. It just shows you Turkey is not going
to be safe from all the instability from Syria."
Turkey's ruling
Islamist-rooted AK Party is one of the main supporters of the rebel
groups fighting the Syrian regime. The arson attack on the Istanbul
mosque has not been the only such incident. Shi'ites in Istanbul claim
they have been the target of increasing sectarian violence.
A
shopkeeper in one of Istanbul's Shi'ite neighborhoods said that
recently, a man shouting he was from ISIL starting attacking Shi'ites
outside another mosque in Istanbul.
Electoral politics could be
also be a factor behind the rising tensions. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan is running for president in next month's elections, and he is
rallying his largely conservative Sunni religious base. Critics accuse
him of increasingly using sectarian language aimed at Shi'ites. He also
resisted calls in the media and from Shiite groups to condemn the
Istanbul mosque attack.
But Mehmet Gomez, head of the Diyanet, the
state body that administers the Islamic faith in Turkey, did visit the
burned out mosque
"We will rebuild the mosque together," he said
at the site of the mosque. "We are all Muslims, we use Korans and
mosques. We will replace the burned books in the best possible way
together, he said, and then we will gather here again and pray
together."
Observers say such gestures could prove crucial amid
rising tensions and concerns over the growing danger of radical groups
like ISIL.
Still, ISIL flags and bandanas are increasingly visible
at protests organized by Islamic groups, indicating that at least some
Sunnis in Turkey have sympathy for the group. Analysts warn that ISIL's
increasing presence is likely to test the cohesiveness of Turkish
society.
Friday, August 1, 2014
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