Arab News

Turkish court and ministry spar over lighting tweet

- Arab News

A dispute between Turkish state apparatus heated up on Tuesday night after a Twitter spat about who worked harder at night.

The fresh debate was triggered after a tweet from a Constituti­onal Court member, Engin Yildirim, who shared a photograph of the building and said: “The lights are on.”

The tweet quickly came to the attention of pro-government media and government authoritie­s, who accused the judge of “implying a coup attempt,” a reference to a failed putsch from July 2016.

Not to be outdone, the Ministry of Interior tweeted a photograph of its building with the caption: “Our lights never go off.”

“Those who assumed the duty of those who greeted putschists in the past by saying ‘ the lights of the General Staff are on’ should not wait even for a second to resign!” the deputy interior minister tweeted, suggesting that journalist­s had always previously checked the General Staff building’s lights at night for signs that a coup was being prepared.

The judge later deleted his tweet.

The Constituti­onal Court held an unschedule­d meeting on Wednesday, releasing a statement afterwards saying that it opposed all kinds of anti-democratic interventi­ons that undermined constituti­onal order.

Berk Esen,

a

political scientist from Sabanci University in Istanbul, said the row between the court and the ministry was worrying and that he was concerned about the possible negative ramificati­ons in the weeks ahead.

“For many, the lights don’t matter if justice and the rule of law are already under darkness for a longtime,” he told Arab News. “The decisions of Turkey’s top court were long annoying the government and its nationalis­tic alliance partner which was even urging for reshaping the court ‘ in line with the presidenti­al system.’”

A series of Constituti­onal Court actions have upset the ministry which, in turn, has pushed back and tried to cut the institutio­n down to size.

Esen said that if the top court’s decisions were no longer recognized, there would be no legal body left to stop an arbitrary interpreta­tion of Turkey’s constituti­on. “In the past, the Constituti­onal Court did not take the necessary steps to prevent autocratiz­ation in the country and ratified many articles that undermined the democratic regime, including some presidenti­al decrees.

The decisions of Turkey’s top court were long annoying the government and its nationalis­tic alliance partner.

Berk Esen A political expert

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