A demonstrator jumps over a bonfire during a gathering to celebrate Newroz in Ankara

Turkey: Oppressing Religious and Press Freedoms

Turkish police forces broke up Kurdish demonstrations a week ahead of Kurdish New Year by using water cannons, tear gas, and baton charges. The biggest protest took place in Diyarbakir, the main city in southeast Turkey. Several thousand people ...

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Turkey: Leading the World with Imprisoned Journalists

At 94 journalists jailed (according to the Journalist Union of Turkey), Turkey stands as the most repressive country for journalists on strictly imprisonment terms. Most of the imprisoned journalists hail from the Kurdish minority. Ragip Zarakolu was arrested ...

POMED Notes: The Future of Syria: Political Turmoil and Prospects of Democracy

On Monday, the SETA Foundation hosted a discussion panel on Syria’s future and the potential role of Turkey in the conflict going forward. The panel discussion began with opening remarks by the moderator and panelists, followed by a question and answer session. Moderating the discussion panel was Kilic Kanat, non-resident fellow at the SETA Foundation. Panelists included, Helena Cobban, veteran journalist and Erol Cebeci, Exeutive Director of the SETA Foundation, ...

Analysis: “How to Make Turks Your Friends/Enemies”

Soner Cagaptay, Director of the Turkish Research Program at the Washington Center for Near East Policy, writes that a nation can either make friends or enemies with Turkey based on its appearance through the "PKK prism." Cagaptay asserts that "Turks judge the world" through the PKK prism: "aid Turkey against the PKK and you become its best friend. Allow perceptions of support for the PKK to build and you invite Turkey's ...

Daphne McCurdy On “Turkey’s Post-Election Crisis”

Daphne McCurdy, POMED Senior Research Associate, writing at OpenDemocracy discussed the political and legal crisis confronting Turkey since its June 12 election. She examined the apparent politicization of legal decisions that have precluded Hatip Dicle, an independent backed by the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) from taking his seat. McCurdy used the Dicle case to highlight tensions within Turkish society, including those between the political and armed aspects of the Kurdistan ...

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New POMED Policy Brief: Shifting the Focus: Consolidating Democracy in Post-Election Turkey

Turkey’s parliamentary elections on June 12 resulted in a resounding victory for the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), which won its third straight election and again increased its share of the national vote. In the latest POMED policy brief, ...

Turkey: Democracy is “Unresolved,” “Not Yet Consolidated”

James Traub writes in Foreign Policy that Turkey’s democracy remains “unresolved” eight years Erdogan came to power. The AKP’s commitment to the rule of law and minority rights is doubted by some secular Turks, who also fear that the country is becoming more conservative (the country’s Higher Education Board’s recent decision to stop teachers from expelling women wearing headscarves from classrooms may suggest otherwise, however). The recent constitutional referendum, moreover, ...

POMED Notes: “Is Turkey Becoming Less Democratic?”

On Monday, September 13th, POMED hosted an event entitled “Is Turkey Becoming Less Democratic?” The event was moderated by Bill Schneider, Distinguished Senior Fellow and Resident Scholar at Third Way and the Omer L. and Nancy Hirst Professor of Public Policy at George Mason University. The discussion featured three panelists: Gonul Tol, Executive Director of the Center for Turkish Studies at the Middle East ...

Turkey: Resolving the Kurdish Issue Through Democracy

Gonul Tol, Director of Center for Turkish Studies at the Middle East Institute, wrote at Foreign Policy’s Middle East Channel yesterday that the Kurdish issue in Turkey “is primarily an issue of democracy and should therefore be resolved through democratic means.” The PKK has become an actor in national politics, not solely an insurgent group – as such, matters of equality, minority rights, and rule of law must be approached through democratic ...

Iraq: Kurdish Villages With No Government

In a group of Kurdish villages in the Qandil mountains in Iraq, the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) is the only active body that maintains security in the region. Namo Abdolla writes in The New York Times, "It is a place without a government, and without disorder. It is, perhaps, in many ways, an ideal example of what philosophical anarchists wish to see in a larger community." The ...

Turkey: 15 Year-Old Kurdish Girl Convicted As Terrorist

Becky Lee Katz at the LA Times Babylon & Beyond blog reports that a 15 year-old Kurdish girl, Berivan Sayaca, who attended a demonstration while visiting her aunt, has been convicted as a terrorist and sentenced to a seven-year, nine-month jail time. Turkish authorities allege that the demonstration was held by the Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK) and they accuse Sayaca of throwing stones at the police. Supporters of Sayaca deny ...

Turkey: Kurds Reconsider Resignations

Reuters reports that the Turkish government announced it will continue as planned with reforms expanding Kurdish rights despite a court ruling that banned (see previous post) the Democratic Society Party (DTP). According to Interior Minister Besir Atalay, "the Kurdish initiative will continue with determination, the necessary regulations will be accelerated."Nonetheless, Christian Science Monitor wonders whether the ban on the DTP and subsequent violent protests will undermine reform efforts.  According to Dilek Kurban of the Turkish ...

Turkey: Democracy and the Kurds

The Washington Post has written an editorial criticizing Turkish PM Recep Erdogan  for backsliding on his commitment to democratic principles.  Despite the fact that Erdogan is pushing through Kurdish reforms, the dimming prospects of Turkey joining the E.U. has led Turkey to adopt an unwanted stance on Israel and a coziness with Iran, Syria and Sudan, as well as cracking down on Turkish media.  The editorial concludes that Erdogan must stop "coddling ...

Turkish Reforms for Kurdish Minority

Reuters is reporting that Turkey has laid out a reform plan to expand Kurdish rights, including the creation of an independent body to investigate cases of torture and allowing Kurds to campaign and broadcast in Kurdish.  The main opposition party, the Republican People's Party (CHP), walked out of parliament in response to the legislation, which aims to disarm the Kurdish PKK.  According to the New York Times this new plan comes ...

Turkish Rallies over Detained ‘Peace’ Group

Agence France Presse is reporting that thousands of Kurds rallied in Diyarbakir as 34 members, including eight Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) rebels, of a “peace group” arrived from Iraq to show support for Ankara’s plans to end the 25-year Kurdish conflict. The group surrendered to police and were taken into custody for questioning immediately after crossing the border. According to the article,  "Turkish officials have said the group’s members were welcome ...

How to Define a Turk?

The Washington Institute's Soner Cagaptay questions whether Turkey should grant group rights to the Kurds as part of the "democratic opening process" recently spearheaded by the Justice and Development Party (AKP). Instead, he argues Turkey should deal with the Kurdish issue by focusing on the individual rights of all Turkish citizens to "help make Turkey a more liberal country."

Middle East Progress: A Spotlight on Turkey

Middle East Progress focuses on the Turkey’s impending constitutional crisis. Ian Lesser warns that the likely court decision in Turkey may have dire consequences. “Turkey’s E.U. candidacy may be irreparably damaged, nationalist tendencies reinforced, and relations with the United States, already troubled, could be further compromised.” The Economist calls the situation “a tragedy in the making,” and suggests that “the fallout at home would be serious, even if the AKP were ...

Turkish Raids on PKK

Daveed Gartenstein-Ross and Samantha Rollinger at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies ask, "Should the U.S. take steps to address Turkish concerns about the PKK, and thus make future interventions less necessary?" At the end of April the Turkish military made numerous strikes on the Kurdish group just over the border, furthering strain on the Turkish-Iraqi- American alliance triangle. The authors cite Svante Cornell of Johns Hopkins University's Paul H. ...

PKK Strains Turkey-Iraq Relations

Hiwa Osman in the Daily Star declares that the best solution to moderating the PKK is not an offensive one, citing the recent incursion by Turkish military as a failure. He also notes problems the PKK, the militant Kurdish population in Turkey, poses for their Iraqi brethren politically. "The Kurds appreciate the importance of long-term strategic ties with Turkey," and believe that "PKK issue is an irritating factor ...

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