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Purveyor

(29,876 posts)
Tue Jun 4, 2013, 04:02 PM Jun 2013

Revolt in Turkey: Erdogan's Grip on Power Is Rapidly Weakening

For a decade, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has had a tight grip on power. But it suddenly looks to be weakening. Thousands have taken to the streets across the country and the threats to Erdogan's rule are many. His reaction has revealed him to be hopelessly disconnected.

These days, though, Istanbul is producing images that carry a distinctly different meaning -- images of violent protests against the vagaries of Erdogan's rule. And it is beginning to look as though the prime minister, the most powerful leader Turkey has seen since the days of modern Turkey's founder Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, might be losing control.
As recently as mid-May, Erdogan boasted during an appearance at the Brookings Institute in Washington D.C. of the $29 billion airport his government was planning to build in Istanbul. "Turkey no longer talks about the world," he said. "The world talks about Turkey."

Just two weeks later, he appears to have been right -- just not quite in the way he had anticipated. The world is looking at Turkey and speaking of the violence with which Turkish police are assaulting demonstrators at dozens of marches across the country. Increasingly, Erdogan is looking like an autocratic ruler whose people are no longer willing to tolerate him.

--CLIP
Democracy Lost

But one thing got lost in the shuffle: Democracy. Success made Erdogan even more power-hungry, thin-skinned and susceptible to criticism. Indeed, he began governing in the same autocratic style for which he had bitterly criticized his predecessors. And now, he is faced with significant dangers to his power from several quarters.

The biggest danger facing the Turkish premier is his own high-handedness. Though he said on Monday that he understood the message being sent by the protesters, there is little evidence that is true. Indeed, his response thus far has shown the degree to which he has become distanced from realities in his country. With hundreds of thousands of people taking to the streets, Erdogan has opted for confrontation rather than de-escalation. On Monday morning, he threatened that he would be unable to keep the 50 percent of Turks who voted for him from taking to the streets themselves. Critics see the comment as nothing less than a threat of civil war.

MORE...

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/revolt-in-turkey-erdogan-losing-grip-on-power-a-903553.html#ref=nl-international

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Revolt in Turkey: Erdogan's Grip on Power Is Rapidly Weakening (Original Post) Purveyor Jun 2013 OP
It's a matter of time before I think Erdogan's power grabbing gets more exposed... cascadiance Jun 2013 #1
He is history -it's not if, it's when n/t malaise Jun 2013 #2
 

cascadiance

(19,537 posts)
1. It's a matter of time before I think Erdogan's power grabbing gets more exposed...
Tue Jun 4, 2013, 04:36 PM
Jun 2013

His relationship with Ahmet Çalık, who owns Çalık Holding, which Erdogan's government paved the way of buying off government media property to building more of a media monopoly in Turkey earlier.

http://seriesofhopes.wordpress.com/2008/04/30/the-sale-of-sabah-and-atv-erase-and-rewind/

And of course many accuse the media largely owned by Çalık now, of ignoring the current crisis...

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/06/03/us-turkey-protests-media-idUSBRE95217E20130603

More of Erdogan's crony capitalism in process...

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-09-13/erdogan-s-new-elite.html

Çalık himself is a very questionable "elite", who had been made as a Turk part of the government of Turkmenistan in a corrupt fashion as documented by the documentary "Shadow of the Holy Book", which is a very interesting documentary on the corruption of big corporations and a country like Turkmenistan that involved American companies too like John Deere and Caterpillar.

http://www.shadowoftheholybook.net/

Preview: http://www.fandor.com/films/shadow_of_the_holy_book

This is a very good documentary that shows a very corrupt government and how it gets totally corrupted by cronies, and an obsession of the leader with his "holy book". I got to see it many years back at a documentary film festival.

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