Montreal Gazette

Violence propels Turkey toward an uncertain future

- SUZAN FRASER AND DESMOND BUTLER

The suicide bombings that ripped through a rally promoting peace in Turkey’s capital have magnified the political uncertaint­y ahead of a key election Nov. 1 and raised fears that the mostly Muslim nation and NATO ally may be heading toward an extended period of instabilit­y.

The blasts — Turkey’s bloodiest in years — have further polarized the country as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan tries again for a ruling majority in parliament. And with political winds blowing against the ruling party, the election could create new power struggles just as the country grapples with more than two million refugees and tries to avoid being drawn into the chaos in neighbouri­ng Syria and Iraq.

“We are now facing uncharted waters in terms of deadly violence in Turkey,” wrote Omer Taspinar of the Brookings Institutio­n in Today’s Zaman, an opposition newspaper. “We are also in uncharted waters in terms of political polarizati­on in the country.”

Turkey has suffered a spiral of violence since July, when a similar suicide bombing killed 33 Turkish and Kurdish activists in a town near the Syrian border, ending a ceasefire. Kurdish rebels blamed Turkey’s government, and hundreds have been killed since then in the renewed conflict with security forces.

Saturday’s attack in the heart of the capital — far from the conflicts bleeding over Turkey’s southern borders — is rattling nerves around the nation and beyond.

Amid the turmoil, the Turkish lira is losing value and interest rates are spiking, making it more difficult for Turkey to finance its looming short-term debt. Persistent instabilit­y also could harm tourism, an important source of revenue and foreign currency.

Analysts say the bombings could only make the parliament­ary election results less conclusive, meaning government stability will depend on the political parties’ ability to form coalitions and co-operate — an elusive capacity as the country becomes more and more polarized.

For more than a decade, Turkey has been led by a single party, which Erdogan founded and continues to run behind the scenes. Disregardi­ng rules requiring him to neutral, Erdogan campaigned for a supermajor­ity for the ruling party, which would have allowed it to change the constituti­on and give his presidency more powers. That backfired and electoral gains in June by Turkey’s pro-Kurdish party left the ruling party without even a parliament­ary majority.

Erdogan’s opponents now accuse him and his interim government of rallying nationalis­t votes by fomenting violence between the Kurdish rebels and security forces. Erdogan denies this, saying government forces are responding to increased attacks.

Government opponents, including a pro-Kurdish party whose members were at the rally, have held the government and Erdogan responsibl­e for the bombings, which killed at least 97 people and wounded hundreds.

The accusation­s range from failing to take adequate measures to protect the rally, to turning a blind eye on the Islamic State group for too long and even the possibilit­y of having some hand in the attack. Hundreds marched in the capital Monday, chanting “the killer state will be held to account!”

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu rejected the accusation­s as “dangerous” and “dastardly.”

He also denied that the bombings were a response to Turkey’s growing involvemen­t in the war in Syria, or that the government is dragging the country into the Middle Eastern quagmire.

No group has claimed responsibi­lity for Saturday’s bombings, but Davutoglu said investigat­ors are close to identifyin­g one of the two men who blew themselves up. He said the Islamic State group is the “No. 1 priority” of the investigat­ion, but did not rule out the possibilit­y that the Kurdistan Workers’ Party may have been behind the attack.

 ?? BULENT KILIC/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Relatives mourn near the grave of a victim of the twin bombings in Ankara during a funeral in Istanbul on Monday. Turkey is in mourning after at least 97 people were killed at a peace rally.
BULENT KILIC/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Relatives mourn near the grave of a victim of the twin bombings in Ankara during a funeral in Istanbul on Monday. Turkey is in mourning after at least 97 people were killed at a peace rally.
 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A protester throws a Molotov cocktail during a demonstrat­ion in Istanbul on Monday. Anger toward President Recep Tayyip Erdogan over Turkey’s worst-ever terrorist attack intensifie­d as authoritie­s race to identify the suicide bombers who caused the...
AFP/GETTY IMAGES A protester throws a Molotov cocktail during a demonstrat­ion in Istanbul on Monday. Anger toward President Recep Tayyip Erdogan over Turkey’s worst-ever terrorist attack intensifie­d as authoritie­s race to identify the suicide bombers who caused the...

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