The Asian Age

For exiled novelist Asli Erdogan, Turkey is ‘ like 1930s Germany’

■ In Prez Recep Tayyip Erdogan — no relation — she sees a man tightening control over everyday Turkish life, emboldened by an outright victory in June elections, sweeping new powers and a crackdown on opponents

- Michelle Fitzpatric­k

Frankfurt am Main: Turkish novelist Asli Erdogan, living in exile in Germany as she risks a life sentence on terror charges at home, thinks the writing is on the wall: her country is sliding into fascism.

The award- winning author, still traumatise­d by the four months she spent in an Istanbul prison, warns that Turkey’s institutio­ns are “in a state of total collapse”.

In President Recep Tayyip Erdogan — no relation — she sees a man tightening control over everyday Turkish life, emboldened by an outright victory in June elections, sweeping new powers and a crackdown on opponents.

“The extent of things in Turkey is like Nazi Germany,” the flamehaire­d 51- year- old told AFP in an interview in Frankfurt, her temporary home as she awaits the outcome of her court case in absentia.

“I think it is a fascist regime. It is not yet 1940s Germany, but 1930s,” said Asli.

“A crucial factor is the lack of a judicial system,” she added, describing a country of overcrowde­d prisons and pro- Erdogan judges in their twenties rushed in to replace ousted peers. Asli herself was among the more than 70,000 people caught up in a wave of arrests under a state of emergency imposed after a failed 2016 coup against Erdogan.

She was held for 136 days over her links to a proKurdish newspaper before being unexpected­ly freed on bail.

The detention of the author of such novels as The City in Crimson Cloak and The Stone Building and Other Places, famed for their unflinchin­g exploratio­ns of loss and trauma, drew internatio­nal condemnati­on.

Turkey’s Nobel literature laureate Orhan Pamuk has called her “an exceptiona­lly perceptive and sensitive writer”.

Turkey’s post- coup purge targeted not just alleged backers of preacher Fethullah Gulen, blamed by Ankara for the attempted putsch, but also opposition media and people accused of ties to Kurdish militants.

Turkish authoritie­s reject accusation­s of widescale rights violations after the coup, and the state of emergency was lifted last month, after Erdogan was re- elected under a new executives­tyle presidency giving him direct control of ministries and public institutio­ns.

“Erdogan is almost omnipotent,” Asli said.

“He decides on the price of medicine, on the future of classical ballet, his family members are in charge of the economy... Opera, which he hates, is also directly tied to him,” she added, chuckling. That’s the nice thing about fascism, it’s also pathetical­ly funny sometimes.”

Turkish legislator­s have also approved new legislatio­n giving authoritie­s greater powers in detaining suspects and imposing public order, which officials say is necessary to combat multiple terror risks.

“It’s an emergency state made permanent,” said Asli.

As for herself, Asli has given up hope of being acquitted and returning to Turkey anytime soon.

“They are not bluffing,” she said she realised after several journalist­s were sentenced to life terms.

She faces charges of spreading “terror propaganda” for her work as a literary advisor to the newspaper Ozgur Gundem.

The paper itself was shut down, accused by Turkish authoritie­s of being a mouthpiece for the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party ( PKK), considered a terror group by Ankara and its Western allies.

The next hearings in Asli’s case are scheduled for October and March.

The diminutive former physicist said the wait for the verdict was “almost unbearable”.

“One of the biggest tortures you can do to a human being is to keep his fate unknown.”

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Asli Erdogan

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