By James M. Dorsey:
Taksim is not (yet) Tahrir

سيد أبوالدهب Ýí 2013-06-03


> Almost a week of countrywide protests in Turkey have left an 
> indelible mark on the countryâs political landscape: broad 
> discontent with the policies of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip 
> Erdoganâs policies and increasing haughtiness bubbled to the 
> surface; militant soccer fans thousands of whom joined the Taksim 
> Square protests united and were politicized; and the role police 
> force plays in solidifying opposition groups and resolve was 


> highlighted.
> Mr. Erdoganâs intransigence and hard-handed police attempts to 
> suppress the protest with tear gas and water cannons swelled the 
> ranks of the demonstrators and turned a demand for perseverance of a 
> 75-year old Istanbul park into a massive call for the prime 
> ministerâs resignation. Thousands of militant fans of Istanbulâs 
> three rival soccer clubs led by the left-wing, most politicized of 
> the support groups Carsi, the ultrasâ of Besiktas JK, joined 
> forces for the first time in 30 years as they march to Taksim 
> Square. So did rival soccer fans in other cities.
> Comparisons between Taksim and Cairoâs Tahrir Square that has come 
> to symbolize the ability of the street to topple a government are 
> tempting. To be sure, there are superficial similarities but these 
> are outstripped by the differences. The two square share the 
> unification of rival soccer fans with a history of fighting one 
> another; the occupation of a main city square; the protestersâ 
> slogan: Erdogan, istifa! or Erdogan resign in imitation of Egyptâs 
> Mubarak irhal! or Mubarak leave!; the violent police crackdown; and 
> the ultimate at least partial government backdown.
> But unlike mass demonstrations that toppled leaders in North African 
> nations, the protests in Turkey are against a democratically elected 
> leader who has won three elections with a respectable majority, 
> presided over a period of significant economic growth and 
> repositioned his country as a regional power with global ambitions. 
> They also occurred in contrast to Arab countries in a country that 
> despite all its warts is democratic and has a strongly developed, 
> vociferous civil society.
> The Taksim protests in the week that Istanbul celebrated its capture 
> by the Ottomans 560 years ago have sent Mr. Erdogan an unambigious 
> message: discontent with the prime ministerâs authoritarian 
> streak, the Turkish governmentâs support of Sunni Muslim rebels in 
> Syria, increasing government control of large chunks of the media 
> and attempts to stifle independent reporting and commentary, and 
> suspicion that he is attempting to Islamize public life is mounting. 
> The protests constitute a warning that maintenance of his style of 
> government could as yet turn Taksim into Tahrir.
> A decision by the diverse, uncoordinated groups that came together 
> on Taksim not to occupy the square and build a semi-permanent tent 
> camp to press their demands for reversal of their demands for 
> preservation of the park that is to be replaced by a shopping mall, 
> an apology by the police for its heavy handed use of force and 
> resignation of the Erdogan government has taken the wind out of the 
> protests. The momentum has temporarily shifted in favor of Mr. 
> Erdogan but to retain it Turks will have to see a real change in his 
> style of governing. Mr. Erdogan benefits from the fact that with no 
> soccer league matches scheduled for the foreseeable future, 
> stadiums, a traditional protest venue in a soccer-crazy country, 
> militant soccer fans are deprived of their natural organizing grounds.
> Despite this, major questions remain that need to be addressed and 
> answered to prevent soccer fans and thousands of others from 
> returning to Taksim and other city squares across Turkey. Will Mr. 
> Erdogan back off his plans to redevelop Taksim that has already led 
> to the shutting down of the squareâs historic bakery, Inci 
> Pastanesi, and its iconic Emek Theater? Mr. Erdogan responded to 
> this weekâs Gezi Part protest by saying the government would push 
> ahead with its Gezi Park plan âno matter what they do.â The 
> prime minister warned that he could put 100 people on the street for 
> every anti-government protester.
> For much of the week, events on Taksim and in other Turkish cities 
> were underrreported in much of the media in Turkey, which ranks high 
> on the list of media-unfriendly countries according to the number of 
> incarcerated journalists. The government strengthened in May its 
> grip on the media with its takeover from financially troubled 
> Cukurova holding television stations and Digiturk pay-tv. The 
> underreporting was allegedly after government phone calls to various 
> media.
> The explosion of discontent allowed secularists with the opposition 
> Republican Peopleâs Party (CHP) in the lead to turn the protests 
> into alleged Islamization of society. Secularists point to this 
> monthâs new restriction on the sale and consumption of alcohol and 
> the naming of a third, controversial Istanbul bridge that spans the 
> Bosporus as the Yavuz Sultan Selim or Selim the Grim Bridge in honor 
> of the Ottoman sultan widely blamed for the massacre of Alevis in 
> the early 16th century. Alevis, accounting for an estimated 20 
> percent of the population, although distinct from Syrian President 
> Bashar al-Assadâs Alawite community see Mr. Erdoganâs support 
> for Syriaâs Sunni Muslim rebels has further disregard of their 
> concerns and have tapped into widespread popular dislike of the 
> governmentâs anti-Bashar policy.
> An interior ministry investigation into the policeâs crackdown on 
> Taksim ordered by Mr. Erdogan will also have to clarify whether the 
> crackdown reflected the split between the prime minister and 
> Fethullalh Gulen, who is also opposed to unrestricted Turkish 
> support for the Syrian rebels. Mr. Gulen, a powerful, self-exiled, 
> Pennsylvania-based cleric, is believed to wield considerable 
> influence within the police force.
> The two men have clashed in the past year over measures to prevent 
> match-fixing after Turkey was rocked by a major match-fixing 
> scandal. Mr. Erdogan defeated Mr. Gulenâs attempts to ensure harsh 
> penalties which would have weakened the prime ministerâs grip and 
> potentially strengthened the clerics influence in Fenerbahce FC, 
> which has a fan base of millions.
> âErdogan is smarter than the Egyptians. He lets people 
> demonstrate.  He caters to the rights of the religious and the Kurds 
> to garner votes and ignores the secularists. The fans are largely 
> secular. This weekâs demonstrations have shown that one can stand 
> against the government and that soccer fans can work together. 
> Things will settle for a few weeks. But Erdogan is on notice,â 
> said a soccer fan as he marched against the government in Izmir.
> James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of 
> International Studies, director of the University of Würzburgâs 
> Institute of Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent World of 
> Middle East Soccer<http://mideastsoccer.blogspot.com/> blog.
> ______________________________

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