President
Erdogan´s party has won today´s general elections in Turkey. As the victory is
not a political tsunami, but enough to give him a solid majority in the
national Parliament, one could hope for a certain degree of moderation to be
restored to Turkish politics.
This
is however very unlikely. I am afraid Erdogan will continue to press for a
domestic agenda that combines religious conservatism with a strong shade of despotism.
But he can count with very serious civil society demonstrations. People in the
big cities are not really prepared for additional limitations to their
freedoms. In addition, the Kurdish question will not fade away. It is actually
calling for a renewed approach to dialogue and reconciliation. Erdogan cannot
respond to such a call with weapons, arrests and brute force.
On
the external front, Erdogan will have to play a constructive role in Syria.
That´s his most important contribution to peace and stability in the region. He
will be also under some kind of European pressure to bring under control the
human trafficking that is taking place on the Turkish shores of the
Mediterranean Sea. To claim he is in charge and at the same time allow free
space for traffickers and other criminal elements to take advantage of the
human misery is a major contradiction that needs to be exposed.
The
leaders within the EU have also to be better at defining a common approach to
Ankara. Such an approach cannot be dictated by despair, by the leaders´
incapacity to deal with the refugee flows that have their assembly points in
Turkey.
No comments:
Post a Comment